Interview
With the Princess
By Shannon the Twisted Link Worshiper
Part I ~ Just a Boy Named Sheik
~Author's Notes~ Music
lyrics and the characters Link, Zelda and that whole gang are used without
permission. Of course, there are characters in here that are 100% MINE, so
there! Suing is not a good idea 'cause I don't get any money from my parents
and I'm poor as dirt. But, I'm sure you'd rather just read the story then
listen to me yap on and on about copyright. So here you go! Read your heart
out. Oh, and I might add, this is eventually going to flow into the plot of
Ocarina of Time, but it's different to make it more interesting. And another
thing. A dedication. Just wanted to write this for anyone who spends part of
his or her day creating. Don't care if it's another fan-fic or a painting or a
sculpture or a movie or whatever. Anyone who spends part of their day creating:
I commend you. Enjoy (the story, not Coke, silly)!
~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~
Now that she's
back in the atmosphere,
With drops of Jupiter in her hair, hey, hey.
She acts like summer and walks like rain,
Reminds me that there's time to change, hey, hey.
Since the return from her stay on the moon,
She listens like spring and she talks like June, hey, hey.
Tell me did you sail across the sun?
Did you make it to the Milky Way to see the lights all faded,
And that heaven is overrated?
Tell me, did you fall for a shooting star,
One without a permanent scar?
And did you miss me while you were looking at yourself out there?
Now that she's
back from that soul vacation,
Tracing her way through the constellation, hey, hey.
She checks out Mozart while she does tae-bo,
Reminds me that there's room to grow, hey, hey.
Now that she's
back in the atmosphere,
I'm afraid that she might think of me as plain ol' Jane.
Told a story about a man who is too afraid to fly so he never did land.
Tell me did the
wind sweep you off your feet?
Did you finally get the chance to dance along the light of day,
And head back to the Milky Way?
And tell me, did Venus blow your mind?
Was it everything you wanted to find?
And did you miss me while you were looking for yourself out there?
Can you imagine
no love, pride, deep-fried chicken
Your best friend always sticking up for you even when I know you're wrong
Can you imagine no first dance, freeze dried romance, five-hour phone
conversation
The best soy latte that you ever had . . . and me
Tell me did the
wind sweep you off your feet
Did you finally get the chance to dance along the light of day
And head back toward the Milky Way
Tell me did you
sail across the sun
Did you make it to the Milky Way to see the lights all faded
And that heaven is overrated
Tell me, did you fall for a shooting star
One without a permanent scar
And did you miss me while you were looking at yourself out there
~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~
A burning sun hung in the
radiant blue Hylian sky. Plump white clouds of cotton white floated merrily
over the fields and cities of the kingdom for the first time in years. This was
the first morning in which the people of Hyrule could send their children to
the schoolhouse without worry and the first day they could wander the countryside
without the fear of being harassed by some monster. This was the first day
Hyrule lived free of the tyrant Ganondorf.
The
princess of Hyrule sat at a tiny round table inside a peaceful little tavern.
Opposite her, a tall Sheikan woman with silver hair sat with her elbows resting
on the wooden surface of the table. A fat round candle sat in the center of the
table, its little flame dancing merrily on the wick. The hot melted red wax
poured down the sides of candle in tiny carved stalactites.
The
woman shifted her chair, her iron armor creaking slightly as it rubbed against
the wood. Her broad mouth cracked into a smile, "Zelda, please, tell me where
you have been for these years!"
Zelda
drummed her fingers on the tabletop as she eyed the woman. Her gray hair was
tied into a knot at the back of her head. Silver tears were tattooed beneath
her eyes. The woman was quite muscular and heavily built for a female and she
wore her iron armor as proudly as any man.
"I
see," Zelda looked around the room a bit uneasily, reiterating what the woman
had just said, "So you wish to know what things have befallen me for the past
years?"
The
woman nodded.
"Well,
I suppose I should tell at least you," Zelda was tapping her foot beneath the
table now, "You might not like it, but I think you'd be one of the few to
understand it."
"Then
you can be straight out and honest. No need to hide a single detail. Besides,
it's likely I'd be the only one to get why you did what you did!" the woman
laughed again; a hearty deep laugh that erupted from her throat, "I raised you,
child!"
"Yeah,"
Zelda murmured as she broke off a dried piece of wax from the candle, "Well,
Impa I don't understand why you care. I mean, it's a long story. It'll probably
take all day for me to tell it and I…"
"That's
alright," Impa waved it off, "I like long stories and I have plenty of time. We
shall sit here until you have told to me what you have been doing up to this
very moment."
She
reached beneath her chair for her rucksack and produced a small leather bound
book, a fresh unopened jar of ink and a quill. Popping the lid off of the jar,
Impa dipped the quill into the ink and placed the tip to the first of the blank
pages inside the little book.
"What
are you doing, if you don't mind my asking?" Zelda queried as she crushed the
wax in her fist. She dusted the red crumbs from her palm to the floor.
"Preparing
to write down every word you say," the Sheikan warrior smiled so that the
tattoos beneath her eyes wrinkled, "If we are going to take such time to do
this, we might as well record it. One day you might want to look back on it."
Zelda
shrugged and closed her eyes as she began to picture back all those years to
when the whole story began. Sucking in a nervous breath, she began her tale.
~*~
"Seven years ago, if
you'll remember, we were attacked by the dark armies of Ganondorf. The day had
begun as any day would, and not a single soul in the whole of Hyrule expected
such a disaster to strike. Supposedly, it had all begun when Ganondorf
threatened my father, and then attacked him. I know, as hard as it is for me to
admit it, that my father died somewhere during the course of those events.
Well, anyway, when my father had been killed, Ganondorf's minions came swarming
through the city and toward the castle. From beneath the ground they came in
great numbers, killing anyone who stood in their path.
"The castle was in
turmoil. Fires, screaming people, everything of a nightmare come to life! I had
been waiting in the courtyard for the young hero Link to return with the last
of those three Spiritual Stones. I was well aware of what was happening. I
could see from where I sat, the fire and I could hear the people. But dared not
to move. I was afraid that if when I left, my Link might emerge into the
gardens right at that moment, and I'd have missed him. It was dire I saw him.
"But
you would have none of my so called 'nonsense.' You insisted that I was crazy
to put my faith in a ragged forest child. 'How?' you asked, 'How is it that you
can sit so calmly with all this chaos around you? I don't understand you
child!' I remember those words exactly, because you were saying them as you
swept me up into your arms and carried me away from my courtyard. I was
shouting at you to put me down. I wanted to wait. I wanted that last stone. I
wanted to speak to Link. You would stand for none of it.
"I
suppose you were hastily saddling up the horse while I looked back at the
castle. I don't even remember what it looked like. I wasn't paying attention,
because I had then, just turned around in time to see a high tiled roof cave
into the fires. And who had died in that accident? What if Link had been there?
I didn't want to think about it. I closed my eyes. I was too afraid to look on
this horrible scene anymore. It was too much for me to grasp. The task Link and
I had originally set out to do was now becoming more complex than it had been
at the beginning.
"You
mounted the horse and dragged me on. I was resistant, of course. You know my
motives of staying, so there is no need to repeat them. Your grip was like a
vice. You pulled me into the saddle with one mighty jerk of your one arm and
there you held me, clamped against your body. In your haste, you tore my dress,
and my legs were cold for some time until I managed new clothes. I felt like a
wreck, more of less, my hair messy from the wind that whipped around me and I
was muddy from the countless times I fell on my knees during our flight to the
stables. It was making me livid. I knew you were only doing this because it was
your duty to protect me. But I was still angry that you were taking me away
from the only person who could save the kingdom. I believed in him, and it
didn't matter if I was the only one who did. He would be our savior. I knew
it."
Impa
interrupted, her quill scribbling furiously on the page, "And did he
save us? I still have no idea how Ganondorf was finally vanquished," she
stopped, looking thoughtful, "Come to think of it, no one knows how he was
killed."
"I'll get to that later, Zelda averted her glare, "But Impa,
despite your actions that day, you had faith in him all the time. I know that.
Couldn't you feel his power? It was magnificent."
"He was rather brave. You could
see it in his eyes," the muscled Sheikan replied as she dipped the quill into
the jar again, "Continue."
"Of course," Zelda leaned back
in her chair, her arms crossed over her chest, "So we left. It had started to
rain by then. I was crying hot tears as we galloped through the city. I saw the
once lively market place in total disarray. The gaily-colored canopies were all
torn and dirty. There was vandalism everywhere: broken windows, crumbling
walls. And there were burning shops and
houses and there were dead and injured people everywhere. I distinctly recall
seeing a woman with one arm torn completely off and her other arm clutching
tightly to a bawling child. She was bleeding heavily, and I wanted to go and
console her.
"But I saw all these things only
briefly as you pushed the horse to its absolute limit. You seemed so intent on
getting me away from there. Nothing else mattered to you but my safety.
"Suddenly, I felt a presence.
The air around me began to grow insanely hot even though the night was cold as
ice. I could think of nothing but this unbearable heat searing through my body.
I thought it would soon tear me apart. A pain that burned like the fires of
hell erupted inside of me, seeming to shred my soul to ribbons. But just as the
pain became unbearable, my mind saw a vision. There was a black horse standing
on a hill. The hill was consumed in flames, burning and destroying everything.
I was not surprised to see that mounted on the horse was that evil Ganondorf
devil. Without warning, he kicked the horse into a gallop down the flaming
hill. The hooves pounded like thunder on the ground.
"The vision ended, but I could
still hear those hoof beats. They grew louder and louder. I turned to look
behind us. Impa, you would never know the horror I felt when I saw that huge
black stallion chasing after us in a full gallop. That horse was far bigger and
far more powerful than our little white mare. Soon Ganondorf would gain on us.
He would seize us. He might have killed us! I was thinking of the thousands of
horrible things he could do to us!
"The drawbridge. I saw it before
us. It was our escape! If we could only get over there, then we might be safe.
I gripped the horse's mane tightly as I watched the great gate draw closer with
the rain dripping of the sharp spikes of the enormous portcullis. Just a little
more!
"Then I saw him. He was just
standing there in the rain, watching our horse charge forward. His green tunic
was soaked to his skin, and his hat hung dripping down his back. Hair matted
and face smeared with mud, Link stood in the pouring rain with his large blue
eyes on me, watching me. Here he was! Finally! He had not perished! He was
alive and safe and well and he was ready to help me.
"But we, of course, could not
stop. Ganondorf came closer every second, his evil aura becoming more and more
sinister as it came onwards. I rummaged inside my dress. It was in there
somewhere, the ocarina. I had kept it with me ever since he had come. The
moment after he left from our first meeting, I had gone to fetch it and now it
was time. He was to have it now; he was destined to. I pulled the ocarina from
the folds of my dress. The rain droplets sparkled on its silver body, which
shone with a mystical light. This is what Ganondorf had attacked us for. This
little instrument was what he had wanted. He would never have it. Not if I
could have any say in it!
"Our horse thundered over the
wooden drawbridge. Link leapt backwards as we shot by. His eyes were filled
with wonder and surprise. I shouted to him as I hurled the ocarina towards him
with all my might, 'Link! Take this! Keep it safe! Please!'
"I watched his eyes follow the
streak of silver as it sailed through the air, landing with a splash in the
city's flooding moat, just as Ganondorf's horse thundered over the drawbridge.
We were soon out of sight. The last time I saw him before he disappeared into
the Sacred Realm was as Ganondorf slowed his steed to ask Link which way we had
gone. I heard nothing, and I saw not much of their exchange, for soon, we were
far, far away.
"Well, since you were there with
me, I need not tell what happened to us on our jaunt across Hyrule. Not much
happened anyway, save those few run-ins with some thieves. What ragged bunch of
fellows they were! But since then, my attitude towards thieves has changed in a
rather surprising direction, and I feel strongly towards my position on such
people.
"Anyway,
after the first attack, you thought it would be a good idea to dress me up. You
decided to make me up to look like I was your son, and before we left for the
ocean, you stopped at a little village for some clothes. You made me up to look
like small Sheikan boy, knotting my hair behind my head like longhaired
Sheikans did, be they male or female. My costume consisted of a baggy pair of
desert pants and a manly long sleeved jerkin, which you embellished with a
Sheikan eye on the breast. Then you took some paint and drew two large
upside-down triangle shapes on my cheeks. When you were done, I did look rather
much like a boy.
"Ah, but I jump ahead in my
story. Let me continue at the time when the sun rose that morning we arrived at
the harbor.
"So we rode on. You thought it
would be fastest and safest to travel through the forests. It would be hard to
follow and track us through Hyrule's dense wood and the ocean stood right on
the outside. At the harbor, we could have found a ship or a fishing boat. We
could have sailed far away, safely from Hyrule, and then returned when it was
safe.
"If you must know, I was never
too keen on that idea in the first place, Impa, but I went along with it because
it was in the kingdom's best interests that one of the Royal Family be kept
alive. As the heir to the throne, it was I who had to be so carefully
protected. And even though I understood this, I felt so, so guilty about the
plan to take off and sail away over the horizon for who knows how long, leaving
Link with no one, simply expecting him to fulfill his destiny and save Hyrule.
He might've been furious to think I'd been so cowardly. I suppose it was Fate
then, who intervened when we reached the harbor that morning.
"You should have been expecting
the assault. After all, we had been attacked by thieves at least three or four
times. You were just… thankfully… careless. They came from behind a fisherman's
stall, all four of them. Two looked like teenagers and another could have been
about twenty years. The fourth hung back a bit, for he was only a boy who
looked a little older then I. Thirteen maybe? Despite his age, he was certainly
with the other three thieves, and actually seemed to command a bit of authority
over the bunch.
"They made no move for a long
while; they just followed us as we made our way down to the docks. When we
stopped, they stopped, and when we began to move again, so did they. You were
too busy looking ahead to notice them behind us, but I saw them. I saw them as
they conferred with each other and I saw as the thirteen year old and the
tallest one break away from the two teens. And then I watched as the two that
were left continued to follow us to the docks.
"The docks were thronging with
people, far more crowded then it had ever been. People must have heard of the
attack on the castle by then, and were frantically trying to leave Hyrule. When
you got off the horse to go and make the arrangements for our passage, it
happened.
"Leaving me alone was silly. I'm
not even quite sure why you did so. I guess that there was just a lot on you
mind, Impa, and you weren't really thinking of the things that could happen to
a lone little child on a white horse in the middle of a frenzied crowd. I
watched you head off and I looked around for any signs of the motley pair I'd
seen following us before, but they were nowhere to be seen."
Impa shook her head as she
scrawled in her loopy script as fast as her hand could move, "You are right my
princess, I do not know what had possessed me that day. I was just so bent on
getting us out of there that I forgot all else! I think I just assumed you'd be
safe disguised as you were."
Zelda smiled warmly, "Don't
regret saying that. I understand. But if you please, I should like to go on."
"Yes, yes, do," Impa waved her
free hand, her feathered pen still quivering as she wrote.
"Of course," Zelda cleared her
throat and continued to speak.
"I
was just sitting there when I suddenly felt a hand grip my thigh. I looked down
with an astonished look on my face as I gripped the saddle tightly. One of the
teenaged pickpockets was standing there, half leaning on me, a toothy grin on
his face. He had a chiseled face and thick black hair slicked back over his
elfin Hylian ears. On his feet were set of fine brown leather boots and on his
hands were a matching pair of gloves, obviously stolen. His belt sported five
throwing daggers, sheathed in more leather. I was certain he had more then just
five daggers on his person though. He wore a sleeveless red tunic revealing
heavily tattooed muscled arms. A certain tattoo on his left arm seemed to jump
out at me, catching my attention. It was a black silhouette of a dragon's head,
its long neck and its wing framed in a circle. I stared at it as he stared up
at me.
"He spoke to me, his voice
hoarse as though shouted frequently, 'Little ninja's lost? Need help? My
buddies 'n' me'll give ya a hand.'
"I cringed back, afraid. I had
been born and raised by nobles. Rich folk like my family tended to treat the
lower classes with disdain. It was unfair. Terribly unfair, and now I see that
more then ever. I had only met one peasant in my entire life, he being Link.
But, Link is different. He has… something about him, a certain… beauty…. To me,
Link was like a god. He was so close, and yet so far from me then. We had
hardly had any time to simply enjoy one another's company. I yearned to know
more of him.
"Well, I was cowering in fear,
leaning in the other direction so far, I was beginning to slip out of the
saddle. Just as I was about to fall, muscled arms caught me and pushed me back
up on the horse. I looked down, expecting to see Impa, but it was not, much to
my dismay. Instead, there was the other teenaged thief. He was a head taller then
the other and just as muscular. But the think that awed me most, was the deep
rich chocolate color of his skin. Never had I seen such a color! He had on a
good pair of brown knickers and creamy white stockings, his feet clad in
leather slippers. He sported a white blouse beneath a fine yellow vest. It was
trimmed with green and hung down to his waist where a long rapier hung on one
of his three belts. The blouse's sleeves had been torn off, exposing his sinewy
arms. This one didn't have arms covered in tattoos like his companion, though
he was not without. He had just one. On his left shoulder, was that silhouette
of a dragon tattoo, just like the tattoo I had noticed on the other.
"I looked back and forth at the
two of them, unsure of what to do. I failed to notice the wink they exchanged,
a tactic I didn't pick up on until much later. Suddenly, they grabbed me,
dragging me off the horse. The black haired one had his hand clamped over my
mouth and the chocolate skinned one held me fast as they slipped back into the
crowds.
"I was trying to call out to
you, but the black haired one has his hand to tightly on my face, and I could
scarcely breathe. In the insanity of the crowd, no one noticed as they dragged
me behind the dock shoppes to a deserted alleyway.
" 'If you don't scream, I'll let
you walk on your own,' the chocolate one whispered into my ear. I nodded my
head vigorously, my eyes wide with dread. I dared not to breath a word as he
let me go, for I feared what they could do to me. I expected the worst.
"The alleyway became a dead end.
The only light there was the sunlight that filtered between the colored
overhangs above us. In the slatted light, I saw the boy and the tall thief. The
boy sat on a large crate, the awkward lighting setting him in an unnatural
luminosity. His long pale blue hair was tied in a thick braid that hung down to
his waist, a dark red bow tied behind his neck. He had narrow coal black eyes.
The short-sleeved tunic he wore was white with a thick trimming of dark green,
much finer then that of his comrades, as was the long sleeved shirt he wore
beneath it. Two belts crossed over his chest, each supporting a curved blade on
his back.
"The other man was impressive
too. He had fiery red hair that hung down to his chin and broad shoulders. He
wore a black sleeveless tunic over a silky blouse with baggy long sleeves and a
pair of loose brown pants underneath. If it weren't for the three long scars
that ran over his right eye, I would have thought he were a merchant or someone
of that kind of trade. He spoke as we approached, 'Ah, you are back. And you
have a guest. How pleasant.'
"I scowled cruelly, clearly
showing my contempt towards them as the red head knelt in front of me. He took
my face in his hand, forcing my head this way and that as he looked me over. He
let me go and said in a smooth voice, 'Tough little thing you are. A child from
the ninja people might do nicely. Your name?'
"I spat at him and the black
haired teenager cuffed me harshly on the side of the face, dizzying me for a
moment. I gave a snort and looked away.
" 'You do have a name, don't
you?' the boy spoke now, narrowing his eyes into tiny slits as he stared at me.
His voice was low and sultry like a bell, 'Dammit, tell me your name!
"I looked beyond the red head
and stared right back at the braided boy, just as coldly as he stared at me. I
snorted again, and then tried to make my voice sound deeper as I said, 'The
likes of you has no right in knowing my name.'
"Then, he smiled, much to my
surprise. It wasn't a warm smile, but one of a roguish quality. He beckoned me
to come closer with his hand. The black haired teen behind me gave me a rough
shove in the boy's direction. I stumbled forward, falling on my knees in front
of the crate where the boy sat. He jumped from his perch and then lifted me
forcibly to my feet. He sneered, 'Your name, Sheikah.'
"I was burning with insane rage.
How dare they snatch me from my so-called mother, who was probably vainly
searching for me, and then treat me with such ferocity for information. Then I
remembered that these weren't respectable people. Cutthroats they were! Even
this boy had probably killed. Looks shouldn't be the way I judged people, I was
telling myself then. Without another thought, I slammed a hard fist into the
boy's face. He staggered back a few paces, holding his throbbing jaw, glaring
at me with those eyes. I saw hate there. Shear bloodthirsty hate.
" 'Lord Hermes!' the chocolate
teen shoved past me to get to the boy, who seemed to be the one he addressed.
He reached out to put a hand on Hermes' shoulder, but the boy swatted him away
growling something about not being so weak that a little kid could harm him
with a punch. The chocolate boy swore at him and stepped on Hermes' foot. While
this little argument was going on, the scarred red head stepped towards me, a
frown etched on his face.
" 'What do you want now?'
My voice cracked. I was so angry that my vision was blurred and everything
seemed to be a shade of red.
"He eyed me strangely as he said
in his rugged voice, 'Hitting someone like Hermes isn't exactly a good idea.
Are you looking for a fight boy?'
" 'No!' I was trembling now, 'I
just want to go back to my mother and leave. Your lives are in my hands. If you
kill me, Hyrule will die.'
"Hermes was coming over to us,
stroking his cheek, his fingers sliding around his chin and then dancing back
up to his temple again. He had apparently heard these last few words. 'Big talk
for such a little mite. Look at you! How the hell old are you? Eight, nine?'
" 'Nine,' I snapped.
" 'And your name?' he went on to
ask.
" 'I'm…' I racked my brains for
a name. My moment of silence got some glares from Hermes and his gang and I had
no idea what to say. I was becoming afraid, and so I blurted out the word, 'Sheik!
My name is Sheik!'
" 'Hn, strange name,' Hermes
straightened and looked at his companions. Now that I thought about it, it was
a clever name. A sheik was a desert prince. Here I was in desert clothes, a
princess disguised as a boy of the ninja clan, the Sheikah. I was rather proud
of myself in that I had thought of such a clever name on the spur of the
moment.
" 'Well, whatever, he'll have to
do,' Hermes was saying as he grabbed my arm, dragging me to his side, 'Let's
get out of here. Jael, Vans, grab your loot and get moving.'
"The two teens were grabbing
some rucksacks from behind the crate as the red head and Hermes began to walk
back down the alley. Hermes still had a grip on my arm as he dragged me towards
the crowded docks; Jael and Vans following close behind.
"They were very casual as they
made their way through the crowds. I had no idea where they were going, but I
was sure it was to wherever they lived. As walked, I saw for a brief moment,
you asking a fisherman if he's seen me. The bandits had obviously seen you too,
and they yanked me onward before I could shout to her.
"I tugged on Hermes' tunic, and
he looked down at me with his cold black eyes, 'What?' I frowned as I asked him
why he had taken me in the first place. Hermes glared at me as he muttered, 'We
need a kid to help us out around the Den.'
" 'That's all?' I said as
I looked away, 'You want me to be a servant?'
" 'Oh, I wouldn't call it that,'
the red head said thoughtfully as he turned down a little dirt path leading out
of the harbor. It stretched over fields until it reached an old crumbling
church that sat on a high cliff overlooking the sea. He walked a few paces
ahead of Hermes, who walked a few paces ahead of Jael and Vans. The man stopped
at the door of the church, waiting for us to catch up. Hermes knocked three
times and the door opened.
"The church was far from
deserted though. The pews had been cleared from the floor and they now lined a
long table took up most of space where the benches had once been, and a few
extra pews that didn't fit had been placed in a small side chapel. This place
had once been a magnificent temple, I could tell, by the fine statues and
carvings, mostly angels and depictions of the gods. Many arches and
architectural splendors adorned the place, and many carpets and tapestries made
the cold ruin luxurious. It reminded me very much of my own home. Of course,
all these fineries had to have been stolen. The place was scattered with people
who were presumably thieves too. And this place, I presumed, was their 'Den.'
But no matter how fine the Den was, I was still angry at the foursome for
kidnapping me and ever angrier still to learn they had taken me because they
were in need of a serving boy. At least they hadn't seen through my guise, and
they thought I was a boy.
" 'Boy, go with Jael. He'll show
you around and then to your quarters,' Hermes snarled as he went off in the
direction of a pair of women. I stared after him as he went, his pale blue
braid swinging behind him as he walked. He seemed to one of those guys who was
always in a rotten mood. I couldn't figure him out at all.
"But no matter what temperament
Hermes chose to be in, I figured I'd be stuck in this thieves' coven for a
while. I looked around for one of the teens that had escorted me here, not sure
which of the two was Jael. I saw the chocolate one first, leaning on the table
near the black haired one. I was beginning to get the idea those two were very
close, which, indeed, they were.
"So I made my way over and
tugged the chocolate boy's yellow vest. It was velvet. Not the fake stuff that
street peddlers sold to poorer people, but real fine velvet. He turned at
looked down at me with a smile. He didn't have to speak; I knew he was
wondering what I wanted. I dipped my voice low again and said quietly, 'Um, are
you Jael?'
" 'That I am,' he smiled, 'What
do you need?' I told him what Hermes had said to me before he had gone stomping
off. Jael laughed saying that Hermes was usually in a foul mood and that I
shouldn't pay it any mind. Then he added that he'd be glad to help me around
the Den.
"I was a bit surprised that a
rogue could be so kind to a prisoner. My father had obviously misled me to
think that people like Link and Jael were horrible and ugly. Neither Link nor Jael
were unpleasant. In fact, both were rather likable. I was beginning to think
this wasn't going to be so bad, so long as I avoided that sullen Hermes.
"Jael led me away from the main
hall and the warm chattering of the thieves there. Down a darkened stone
staircase and then through a long dank passage, he led me, the only light
coming from iron lanterns that hung from every archway. 'These halls,' he said
as he led me along, 'connect a vast network of catacombs. We use the catacombs
and the passages as means to get around Hyrule without a soul seeing.'
" 'Could I cross Hyrule
underground?' I asked. I was impressed, actually. I never knew such an
organization existed beneath our streets.
" 'Aye, you could,' Jael nodded,
'And that, we are going to do. Don't worry, it's not as long as it might seem.'
I followed him as we continued on, amazed at every slight detail I noticed.
Every crack in the wall and every little carving there was wonderful. Ancient
things had always excited me, and a catacomb was no exception. I had read that
the old temples of Hyrule had their own catacombs, but never did I dream that
I'd ever walk through them!
"Soon, the passage stopped, but
it was not at a dead end. Instead, it opened up into a large atrium with
torches flickering in iron sconces on each wall. When I came to stand next to
Jael, I saw that the ground where we stood abruptly ended. The atrium, I
realized, was a dock of sorts, filled with water and a single boat swaying in
the water. I small lantern hung on an iron ring from its prow. The arched
pattern continued on the walls and over the dark canal flowing out of the
atrium.
" 'What is this place?' I asked
Jael as he calmly hopped into the boat. He then reached over the water to lift
me over the water and into the vessel. Without a word, he untied the mooring
from a rusty ring mounted on the end of the passage where we had once stood.
Then he grabbed a long pole from the bottom of the boat, which he used to push
us off.
"Plopping down at the stern of
the vessel, and I at the bow, he slid the pole into the dark waters to guide us
through the still canal. Soon the tunnel opened to another water-filled canal,
though here I realized that there was no need for oars, since the current
flowed quickly, and pulled the boat along on its own.
" 'To answer your question,'
Jael said as he reclined on the back of the little craft, 'This is a canal that
serves as a sort of a highway. It makes a loop around the underground of
Hyrule. It's much quicker than walking, and sometimes we have to get places
fast. There are docks like the one we got on along the way, each a still pool
of water so that the boat will no longer flow with the current.'
" 'How amazing,' I whispered as
I watched the lantern swing its guiding light before us. Jael laughed quietly,
saying how he had never seen a little boy so festinated with such things. He
added that he had never thought that a Sheikan boy of all types would be
such a child. I shrugged and casually said that my mother had been interested
in ancient things.
"We drifted onward in silence.
The only sounds I heard were the constant drips of water splattering in the
corridors nearby and the rushing current of the canal. I began wonder where he
was taking me. Presently, Jael steered the boat out of the main canal and down
a tinier one where the water was still. Guiding the boat with the pole, Jael
brought the boat to a halt by a dock similar to the one we had boarded on. He
tied the little vessel's mooring ropes to a large iron ring in the wall, which
also held the mooring of another boat.
"He clambered out of the boat
and then held out a hand to help me onto the sandstone pier. Unlike the other
place, this did not continue into a large corridor. It was instead, simply a
shelf of stone with that arched pattern worked into the architecture; torches
flickered on the walls. A spiral staircase wrought of iron twisted up to a
floor above. Jael mounted the staircase, telling me to follow. I did, and soon
I found myself in a fine Hylian townhouse. Tall windows reached from the floor
to the ceiling were flung open unto the city outside, long red satin curtains
swaying gently in the breeze that floated in. The floor was of a dark oak,
polished to a glimmering sheen. Fine furnishings, beautiful paintings and other
fineries adorned the place.
" 'What is this place?' I asked,
as I looked around, amazed with all the fripperies around me.
"Jael
smiled as he said, 'Lord Hermes' quarters. This townhouse is in the capital of
Hyrule, where the castle is. See, if you look that way, there is the Temple of
Time,' he pointed out of one of the windows on the southern wall.
"And
to my ecstasy, there it was, that beloved temple where I had sent Link only
yesterday morning. I wondered if he had recovered the Triforce yet. From the
Temple of Time, my eyes wandered to the ruined castle sitting on the hill just
beyond. The walls were charred and there were collapsed roofs and smashed
windows. Ruined gardens, bent fences, complete destruction was all that
remained of the beautiful palace that had once been my home. Jael noticed my
blank look and shook me playfully. I snapped out of my trance, saying, 'You
mean that brat with the braid had all this to himself?'
"Jael
made a strange face as he sat down on a plush armchair, 'Well he would. His
father just recently died, and he was the King. That makes Hermes now the
leader.'
"
'King?' the word made me think of my father as I hung my head, 'The King of
Hyrule is dead. He had no son.'
"
'Hyrule's king?' Jael looked surprised for a moment, and then he burst out
laughing, 'No! I mean Lord Hermes is the son of the King of Thieves.
Lord Hermes is now the leader of our band, not Hyrule! However, he is
not fit to be called the King of Thieves quite yet. He must go through the
Rights of Passage. All six Thieves' Covens, including ours, will present Lord
Hermes with a challenge to test his worth. That's why he needs a serving boy.
He'll be exhausted while preparing and going through all of this, and he needs
someone to just help him out.'
"I
was still a little confused. 'Six covens? Of thieves? I don't understand.'
"Jael
swung his feet over the arm of the chair as he explained, 'There are six
Thieves' Covens: the Coven of Serpents, the Coven of Wolves, the Coven of
Demons, the Coven of Eagles, the Coven of Griffins, and finally, the Coven of
Dragons, which is this one, the High Coven. Each coven has its own leader,
however, the leader of the Coven of Dragons is the King of Thieves.
Understand?"
"I
nodded. Never had I thought that such an organization existed. And here I was,
in the middle of it all without a clue as to what was going on. Jael rose from
his seat and took my hand, leading me back down the iron staircase. He brought
me down a corridor I hadn't noticed when we had gotten off the boat. At the end
of the corridor, was a door. He pushed it open and led me into an average sized
room. The walls were just like all of the walls in these catacombs, arches hewn
in sandstone. The ceiling was arched up too, a large lantern hanging from the
center of the curved ceiling. Amongst the sparse furnishings, were an oak
double bed, a round table with two chairs and a comfortable looking blue sofa.
There were some fineries warming the cold room up such as some wall hangings
and plush carpets. Sensual lamps of many different varieties sat on the table
or hung from the walls or stood on iron stands in the corners.
"
'Here,' Jael cleared his throat, 'Here is your room. Lord Hermes will come when
he's done with the Coven of Eagles. They inhabit that church we came down
through.'
"I
just nodded dumbly. Then he said something that caught my interest, 'Hey, did
you know this room is built directly beneath the place where they say the
Master Sword resides? Right above that lantern they say! This room is connected
to many a legend. Some of the thieves who have slept here have said they have
prophetic dreams or visions of things that are happening in other places.
Premonitions if you will. Oh, I could tell you many, many stories.
"I
was fascinated. I wanted to know so much more all of the sudden. I begged Jael
to tell me more. I wanted to hear more stories surrounding the legendary Master
Sword. I remembered when you used to read to me, Impa, from big old leather
bound books, stories about the Ancient Treasures of Hyrule. I remember hearing
of the Master Sword, the evil destroying sword of myths, which could only be
wielded by the Hero of Time. What if Link were that hero? I thought
suddenly. He had to be! According to the legends, the Hero of Time had to draw
the sword from its resting place in the Temple of Time in order to open the
gate to the place where the Triforce resides. And that was what my dream had
foretold: that Link would become the Hero of Legends. I hoped that the Triforce
was now safely locked away in his heart.
"
'Perhaps another time, little Sheik,' Jael interrupted my thoughts, 'I promised
Vans I'd take him out to a nice place for lunch with today's loot. See ya!' he
turned and walked out the door. I heard his footsteps fade and the creak of
that old boat as he hopped in and then, as soon as I heard the splashing of
water, I knew he was gone.
"So
I was alone now. I ha no idea what was to become of me. I flopped down on the
bed. The mattress was soft and feathery, much like the one I slept upon when I
lived the life of a princess. A princess… that was something I knew I would
never be again. I must have fallen asleep. I am sure I did, because I had a
vision."
Impa
stopped with her quill in the air, her eyes wide, "Again?"
Zelda
nodded, "Yes, Impa, again. It was another prophetic dream. But unlike the ones
I'd had before, this one was much more realistic. It hurt my soul. Perhaps,
then, the stories Jael had told were true. And since having visions was not
something I had never experienced before, I think the magic of the room was
simply making my power more acute."
"I
see," Impa murmured.
"Well,
to tell you about this dream. I found myself sitting on the steps of a great
round altar in the Temple of Time. How I knew it was the Temple, I wasn't quite
sure, but there I was. The altar itself was a raised place in the center of a
round motif situated in the center of the room. A lone window, intricately
paned with iron, let a stream of sunlight leak right onto the altar,
illuminating an object thrust in the center. I stood and climbed the steps to
the place, and to my astonishment, I discovered the object was none other than
the great Master Sword. I stroked the hilt and ran my finger down the little
bit of the blade that was exposed, drawing a line of blood on my finger. I
tried to pull it up, but it refused to budge even the tiniest bit.
"And
then, suddenly, I heard a deep voice whisper, 'Step aside.' I turned to see a
shadowed figure standing at the foot of the altar. He seemed so familiar….
"The
figure approached the sword, and I stumbled out of his way. And as he entered
the light, I saw that I had indeed seen this person before. It was Link, yet he
was different. He looked like an adult. His body was hard and muscled, his face
chiseled and his eyes solemn. However, he had grown to be more beautiful then I
remembered him. Still… what had happened to the Link I knew? Who was this
essence of the boy I had come to love as my best friend?
"He
reached forward and grabbed the hilt of the sword, and not to my surprise in
the least, did he pull it easily from its stone bed. The second the blade left
its sheath, the whole altar glowed, and I found myself enveloped in the light
with him. Above us, the Triforce twinkled merrily in its golden light. The
adult Link reached out to touch it, and just as his fingers were about to graze
the relic, it disappeared. A sharp pain coursed though my breast, and I
screamed and awoke in a deep sweat.
"I
panted and gasped for air. All the lamps in the room, save the large lantern that
hung above, had snuffed out. I shivered.
"Just
then, the door swung open, and standing there was a very irate Hermes. His eyes
were like icy pools of black water, narrowed under his powder blue eyebrows.
His mouth has drawn in a tight frown and his hand gripped the door handle
tightly. Growling angrily, he said to me, 'What was that scream? You sound like
a whinny little girl.'
"
'If it isn't the Braided Brat,' I stuck out my tongue and threw a pillow at
him, missing him completely.
" 'Do you know to whom you speak?' he hurled
the pillow back at me, though he didn't miss his target and the heavy cushion
nailed me squarely in the chest. I was knocked onto my back by the strength of
his throw.
"However,
I still managed to give him a sarcastic comment in return, 'Yeah, His Royal
Highness, Hermes, Lord of the Brainless.'
"
'You shut the hell up, girl,' he snarled back as he stalked over to the bed
where I lay.
"I
wasn't going to say anything, but remembering I needed to play the part of an
egotistical male, I responded by saying, 'Who're ya callin' a girl?'
"He
came to the bed and lifted me with one hand by the scruff of the neck. He
stared into my eyes, narrowing his into tiny slits, 'You are to help me.
I don't need a weakling as my assistant.'
"
'And I don't need a master with a rotten personality,' I snapped back, 'Might
as well play it fair.'
"He
snorted and dropped me onto the floor, 'Come on, I need you. There are still
things that you must know.'
"And
with that he turned on his heel and stormed out of the room, grumbling to
himself all the while. I stood up and dusted myself off and I had only gone a
few steps when he yelled at me to, 'Hurry my girl ass up.'
"
'You sexist freak!' I shouted at him as I jogged after him out the door. His
stride was long so I had to move quickly even to keep up with his walking pace
since my legs were so short. But when he heard that comment, he stopped cold.
Turning he looked at me funny, and I covered my mouth in horror, thinking for
one grotesque moment he had figured out that I wasn't a boy.
"
'What are you, strange in the head?' he curled his upper lip, 'What kind of boy
calls someone sexist just for one insult against women? Come on, it ain't like
you're actually a girl or something.'
"
'Yeah,' I whispered, 'How silly of me.'
'
'Well whatever,' he shrugged and kept walking. Soon he was climbing up the iron
spiral stairs to his quarters. I followed him, keeping as close to him as I
could for fear of his ire lashing out at me again because I was lacking in speed.
Soon I was in that open breezy room again. It was the most open floor plan I
had ever seen, with hardly any walls and a narrow staircase made of oak leading
up to the next floor. A dark oak wine rack that went from the floor to the
ceiling was built in such a way so that it served as a sort of partition
between the sitting room and the kitchen area. A wheeled ladder such as one
would find in a library was fixed onto the wine rack so that the top was
accessible. The whole place was more long than wide and, as I mentioned before,
not lacking windows in the least.
"He
removed his swords from his back, letting them fall with a loud clatter to the
floor. He crashed on the same armchair Jael had earlier, kicking his sandaled
feet onto the table before him. He pulled the top of his tunic off so he could
pull off his shirt, revealing a scarred and muscular torso. I wasn't surprised
to see that he had a black dragon tattooed on his shoulder like Jael and Vans
did. I was figuring it was a sort of symbol of membership amongst thieves. I
didn't have long to look at it though for he was soon pulling his tunic back up
over his body.
Finally
he was settled and with an almost welcoming gesture of his hand, he invited me
to sit. I sat down on the couch opposite him, my hands folded nervously in my
lap, my eyes averting his, and my mouth in a grimace. How dare he even try
to be hospitable!
"
'So, your name again?' he asked, his voice remotely warmer, but still ringing
with cold.
"I
rolled my eyes, 'Are we going to go through that again? Sheik. That's my name.'
"
'Are you sure? That's a strange name for a Sheikan,' he seemed untrusting.
"
'What? You think I don't know my own godforsaken name!?' I retorted, 'So my
father wasn't Sheikan, got a problem with that?'
"
'No need to be rude,' he said calmly as he tossed his braid over his shoulder.
"
'You could do with some of your own advice,' I muttered under my breath.
"
'Anyway,' his voice froze into a superior tone, 'You're my help, so you do what
I say. Got it, kid?'
"
'I have a name: Sheik,' I grumbled. If I was going to live with this boy, I
wasn't going to make it easy for him. I actually figured I'd make his life a
living hell so long as I was around. He was so full of himself and I thought he
needed a good ego beating. I thought I'd be perfect for the job.
"
'I might add that you seem like one of those aristocratic types,' he frowned at
me as he reclined back in the chair, 'Well we ain't gonna put up with any of
that high and mighty crap here. We got a Code o' Honor and you better respect
those laws 'else it might be your head!'
"I
was a bit frightened by his attitude, and I just sat there shaking my head and
cowering with the slightest feeling of fear. He looked like he was going to go
on, and he was staring at me with a look of expectance, as though he wanted
some sort of response. If I was going to be a terror for him, I couldn't be
afraid, so I muttered a little sentence of acceptance of his terms. He nodded
and went on speaking.
"
'As for you, personally, I think you should just cooperate. Learn the tricks of
the trade and forget you were ever of any stature. And you better stop talking
with the language of a noble while you're at it. It pisses me off!' he chuckled
as he added, 'Besides, I don't think the Royal Family will be shoving any more
unfair laws down our throats so I can pretty much tell you to do what I want
without fear of you whining to them to have me hung. Hn, I heard that they were
all killed anyway. It's anarchy baby!'
"I
grimaced, 'How dare you speak of the Princess that way!' I snarled. I wasn't
going to take that kind of insult right to my face, whether he knew who I was
or not.
"He
shrugged and snorted as he replied in a nonchalant tone, 'You act like you knew
her or something, kid. Hold your tongue, you're on my flat now.'
"I
looked away. I was not exactly in a good mood anymore. This Hermes fellow was
really getting to me. Driving me out of my mind and making me boil with rage. I
missed Impa and Link. I wanted to be with the both of them. And then, suddenly,
I felt a horrid lurch in my stomach and I heard Link's voice ringing through my
head, screaming my name. I clutched my temples and squinted my eyes closed. I
could just dimly hear Hermes yelling at me, but Link's frantic yells dominated
my brain. I think I started to shake uncontrollably and I was breaking out into
that heavy sweat once more.
"And
then it all stopped. I looked to see Hermes leaning over me, his hand raised as
though he were about to strike me. I was certain something had happened to
Link. I was positively certain of it."
Impa
was anxiously tapping her quill in the page making large splotches of ink as
she did so, "And what was that?"
"You'll
see later. I'm going to tell you things as I learned them so just hold on,
alright!" Zelda snapped back at her nursemaid. Impa mockingly cowered back,
reloaded her quill with ink and prepared to write again.
"So,
Hermes was just standing there, his face the very picture of annoyance. If
looks could kill, I'd be dead and buried. He was absolutely insane. And I was
absolutely frightened of him. He was starting grumble in his husky voice, 'You…
what the hell was that all about….'
He
went on like that for a couple seconds as he dragged me to my feet. And then,
he stopped his ramblings and slapped me hard across the face. He was seriously
pissed off. At the time I was fearing the prospect of being the lesser of this
lunatic. I think he was about to hit me again, though he never got the chance
to, for he heard the creaking footsteps of someone climbing the iron stairs
from the waterways.
"
'Vans,' he snarled under his breath. How he knew who it was, I wasn't sure, but
lo and behold, Vans was the one who emerged from the dark catacombs below, an
ebony box under one of his brawny tattooed arms.
"
'Now?' Hermes glared at Vans, 'I'm not done with the little runt.'
"
'You mean you aren't done screaming and scaring the kid out of his wits? I
heard you shouting your lungs out as far back as the Lon Lon Ranch dock,' Vans
replied tartly as he ran his free hand through his thick black hair, 'Yes,
now.'
"Hermes
rolled his cold black eyes, an exasperated smirk on his face, 'Well whatever.
Answer whatever the kid wants to know.'
"
'Where are you going?' Vans barked after Hermes, who was already
climbing the stairs to the next floor.
"
'To sleep. I'm tired as hell,' he muttered as without so much as a backward
glance, 'I can't put up with this.'
"
'Spoilt brat,' I grumbled as Vans sat his box on the table and gave me a little
push, forcing me back onto the couch.
"He
laughed, saying how Hermes was just very antisocial. Not the type who liked
speaking to people. He had been only doing his duties of explaining what the
Thieves' Ring was about to the rookie; however, he had obviously lost his
temper. Vans went on to say that I shouldn't worry about it. He'd finish where
Hermes had left off. 'And in a kinder manner!' he added.
"Vans
knelt on the floor in front of me, flicking the box open as he did so. Inside
was a needle, a few flasks of a clear liquid, which seemed to be sterilizer,
and another box, round and flat in shape.
"I
asked him what all these things were. He replied with a smile as he rolled up
my left sleeve, 'Kid, you're going to be one of us now, so we're going to admit
you into our Coven with our seal of honor.'
"He
removed the needle and dipped it into one of the flasks of sterilizer, stirring
it around a bit. He left the needle there for a few moments as he took time to
flick open the round box. Inside was an arrangement of colored liquids inside
of small bottles. I looked closer at the tiny jars of pigments, and realized
that it was ink. I gasped, suddenly realizing what Vans was going to do, 'A
tattoo! You're going to tattoo me!'
"He
chuckled and nodded, 'It's not as bad as it seems. Look at me!' he held out his
arms. They were completely covered it intricate pictures. Things like swords,
dragons, arrows and snakes wound about his sinewy limbs.
"I
was a bit frightened. I knew it would hurt, and to defile my skin like that! I
shuddered. I wondered aloud, 'Do the girls get these too?'
"
'Oh yeah,' Vans took the needle out of the sterilizer and wiped it gently on a
soft sponge, 'But women don't get it on their arms like we men do. Rather, the
tattoo is done on their breast, about here,' he pointed to his heart.
"Through
barely open eyes, I watched Vans gently wipe my arm with the sponge before
squinting my eyes shut as he dipped the needle into the vial of black ink and
then brought it to my shoulder. He told me to keep talking to him and then it
wouldn't hurt so much. I chewed my lip as he thrust the needle in that first
time.
"
'Talk!' he ordered as he continued to draw on my shoulder. I asked him if he
was a good artist since he was the one doing this tattooing business. He nodded
with a smile, saying with a loud laugh, 'Well yes. I better damn well be! After
all, this is gonna be on your arm for the rest of your life and you don't want
some crappy ass job done on you if that's the case!'
"I
managed a meager smile, not daring to look at Vans at all. I felt the pain as
he went on with his task, the needle entering my skin over and over. I then
remembered to talk so I could keep my mind off the hurt. I asked him another
question, 'Vans, why did you pick me? Of all the children at the harbor, why
me?'
"He
knit his brow as he continued to work, 'You seemed healthy enough. You were
Sheikan, which is always a good thing if you're to be a thief and to be honest,
we were in a rush and you were the first suitable kid we saw.'
"
'A thief?' I opened one of my eyes and looked at Vans strangely, 'You want me
to be a thief?'
"He
giggled like a little schoolboy and replied, 'Yes, a thief. What do you think
we all are, traveling players? If you're going to live as Lord Hermes' boy, you
might as well train to be a thief. Who knows, you might even like it!'
"I
closed my eye again, 'Well I'll admit it might take some getting used to.'
"
'Yep,' he started to whistle, 'So little Sheik, tell me a bit 'bout yerself,
okay?'
"I
nodded and began to speak, knowing he was asking only to keep me talking. He
kept whistling as he worked and as I began to spit out some half-truth about
where I came from, 'My mother and I lived at the castle. Mama was the Princess'
own nursemaid and I was her playmate. We just lived at the castle and I was
used to the life there. That's pretty much all there is to it.'
"Vans
stopped whistling to ask another question and then picked up his tune right
again after he spoke, 'So what happened over there?' he flicked his head in the
direction of the ruined castle outside the window, 'Why'd everyone run away?'
"
'The Princess has a sixth sense, did you know?' I answered him, 'She
prophesized a great hero would come and protect the Triforce from this horrible
man who came to work for the king. He's the one who made the castle fall over.'
"
'The Triforce?' Vans giggled again, 'I thought that was just part of children's
lullabies. You mean to say such a thing really exists?' he was dipping the
needle into the jar of red ink now.
"
'Well this is the whole story of what happened,' I supposed I'd tell him about
Ganondorf… just a little couldn't hurt anyway, 'There was this great stocky
Gerudo fellow came striding into my… I mean… the King's Court one day. He
proposed a truce between us and those desert Gerudo bandits. He said he'd be
the Gerudo women's ambassador. When I heard this, I found it strange, since all
the Gerudo were supposedly female. But no matter, Zelda was suspicious of him
right from the beginning. She slinked by him in the corridors and frowned at
him all the time. She told me to stay away from him too.'
"
'Gerudo thieves eh?' Vans said as he lifted my arm a little bit, 'They're all
finely trained in our thieving arts. Pretty little things too. Ah but we all
don't like to mix with them…. unless its for sex,' he laughed, 'They can be
pretty hostile. Besides, we're city slickers. Them Gerudo ladies like it out on
the edge of Hyrule where they can loot caravans and such. That just ain't our
style around here.'
"I
continued with my story when he was done, 'Well, then one day, this strange boy
appeared. I saw the Princess and he talking. Talking all the time! I dunno what
happened after that, but I bet those two were conspiring. Zelda always had this
knack for causing trouble. She caused just a little wee bit more then she'll
ever know….' I stopped. Vans was cleaning off the needle.
"
'All done,' he said with a little grin. I flexed my arm and then looked at my
shoulder. A dragon like the one Vans had on his own shoulder now adorned mine.
It was actually pretty neat looking with its twisted body curling inside a
large round circle. The eye was colored red.
"
'The circle for trust and unity,' Vans traced the tattoo with his finger, 'A
dragon for strength and honor. That is why the High Coven is the Coven of
Dragons.'
"Rolling
down my sleeve and shaking my head, I stood. The whole process had somewhat
shaken me, and my stomach was swimming. I had no idea what to do anymore. All
right, so I, the former Princess of Hyrule, had been accepted into the underworld
of Hyrule, but then what? Was I to become a thief? How was I to save Hyrule and
find Link if I was stuck here?
"Vans
was packing up his tattooing kit. As he clicked the latches of the box closed,
he asked me, 'So Sheik, what has your mother taught you?'
"I
shook my head, not quite sure of what he meant. He rephrased his question for
me, 'What training has your mother given you? Ain't you Sheikah the types who
start all that combat instruction real early?'
"I
shook my head, now understanding what he meant. I told him that I had only had
basic fencing and arching lessons. Nothing quite beyond that.
"
'And how do you fair with the bow? Have you ever tried to wield a short sword?'
he asked me many questions like that about my combat training. He wanted to
know the details of my skills, what weapons I could use and how well I could
use them. Was my agility decent? Did I know basic evasion maneuvers? Just how
far could I throw a spear? Some of the things he asked or assumed I
could do, I was unable to say I had tried. There were even some weapons and
techniques I had not even heard of!
"
'Well, I suppose that'll do,' he shrugged and started for the iron stairs,
'It's a bit late and you'll want to get up nice and early. Why don't you go and
get a good rest and Jael'll see you bright 'n' early.'
"I
found my way to my room beneath the ground. I was desperately tired by then; I
had had a rather exasperating day. I closed the door behind me and fell asleep
in the middle of the floor.
"I
awoke from a dreamless sleep to find Jael hunched over me, his dark chocolate
skin glowing an odd orangey color in the lamplight. 'Wake up, wake up little
Sheik!'
"I
sat up and stared him in the eyes groggily. My hair had fallen out of the tight
bun it had been in the day before, my pale golden locks barely tied up anymore,
and my clothes were a sloppy mess. I stood up and stumbled over to the bed,
where I tore a ribbon from a nearby tapestry hanging on the wall. As I tied my
hair up in a ponytail, as it was stylish for young men to do, I came back over
to where Jael was standing rather impatiently, waiting for me.
"
'Come on, come on,' Jael was shooing me out the door before I had a moment to
react, 'There's things to do, people to meet and swords to play with!' he
tapped his rapier as he practically skipped to the dock where a boat bobbed
peacefully. Leaping into the little vessel, he reached over the water and
pulled me in too. And quicker than I'd seen any sailor, he had freed the boat
of its moorings and we were soon adrift in the main canal.
"
'What time is it?' I could hardly even see straight, I was so tired.
"
'Five in th' morning!' he whistled cheerfully, 'Just afore sunrise!'
"How
he was so optimistic at this hour I had no idea, however, I managed a meager
smile and leaned sleepily on the prow of the boat as we drifted on. I was
nearly nodding off to sleep when I heard my stomach roar for something to eat.
I realized that I had not had a decent meal in days. I complained to Jael. He
let out one of his deep throaty laughs and said nothing. I frowned and clutched
my stomach, my hunger pains making me irritable.
"Soon
he was guiding the boat down one of the side canals to a dock. This dock looked
a little more like a traditional dock with a low wooden platform built just
over the water, a heavy metal lamp sitting there, giving the little wharf
light. A ladder leaned on the high stone platform's wall as a means to climb
up. Up on the platform, was a long dark hallway leading into the catacombs.
Jael hopped out of the boat and onto the dock. He helped me out and led me down
the hallway. Torches lined the walls, illuminating the way. Soon Jael stopped
before a tall wooden ladder leading up into the darkness above. He slipped one
foot on the first rung and began to climb. I followed him up, and soon we were
no longer in the catacombs. Instead, we were in the dormitories of a ruined
monastery complex. The living quarters seemed to be the only intact building
remaining of the sprawling monastery. Out side the tall vaulted windows nearby,
I saw a canopy of leafy foliage and crumbled walls and broken stone archways.
"
'Hurry up little Sheik!' Jael called. He was already far down the hallway, 'You
said you were hungry, so if you want a meal before we begin, I suggest you come
quickly!'
"I
darted after him down the hallway. The architecture of the place was
magnificent, the ceilings high and the floors of marble. The light of the
rising sun was pouring in through the foliage and into the monastery through
the shinning glass windows. Jael led me through a few twisting corridors, and
down a tiny spiraling stone staircase which opened up into a vast kitchen at
the bottom. Other people, mostly children with a few scattered adults were all
crammed on wooden benches around a long dinning table. I was practically
drooling at the thick aroma of ham and eggs. As if in a trance, I followed Jael
as he found me a seat between a little brown haired boy and a tall gangly
looking teenager with long curly sea green locks of hair. Jael squeezed in at the
end of the bench next to the teen and served himself.
"
'Who's this?' the teen asked Jael as he nicked a piece of bacon from my plate.
Jael responded saying with a merry laugh, 'New kid. His name's Sheik.'
"
'Ah, hello Sheik,' he replied as he stole more food off my plate, 'I'm called
Praedari. Pleased t' meet ya!'
"
'Pleasure's all mine,' I said kindly as a placed my arm between him and my
plate.
"Praedari
motioned to the brown haired boy on my other side, 'And that there's Odysseus.
He might be real short but he's my best buddy. A sly wit, sure, and damn
clever. You can't beat him at a war of tongues.'
"I
looked at the little child next to me, 'Are you just as old as him? I motioned
to Praedari.
"Odysseus
looked at me with a narrowed eye, 'Aye, I am a hearty lad of a good thirteen
years. But just don't you go makin' fun o' me 'cause I'm a shrimp. Praedari
should really talk though. He's too damned tall. Looks like a frickin' maypole
if ye ask me.'
"I
laughed and continued to eat. Praedari, Odysseus, Jael and I made idle chitchat
as we ate. However, in the middle of a joke Praedari was telling, a strong
voice rang out over the low drones of chatter. I could have sword I'd heard
that voice somewhere before.
"
'Soon we will go to work ye scalawags,' I looked and recognized the speaker on
the spot. It was the redhead who was with Hermes the day before. He seemed to
command a lot of respect amongst the thieves, for they all had their eyes glued
on him intently, 'When ye've finished with your meal, you are excused to go.
Training will proceed until noontime when we will take a rest for lunch.'
"When
he was finished, he disappeared out the door. As I watched him go, I asked,
'Who's that, Jael?'
"
'Lysander, the fiery red headed leader of the passionate Coven of Griffins.
He's Lord Hermes' second man,' he replied as he took a sip of his hot cocoa,
'He's also in charge of the Griffin School of Thieving Arts. All thieves come
here as children to be trained so they can face the world as adults.'
"
'He's my Coven's master as well as my father. I'm a Griffin,' Odysseus slide
his jacket off his shoulders so I could see his tattoo. It was that of a
griffin encircled in its wings, a sword grasped in its forepaws. The tattoo was
inked in a deep red color.
"
'And I'm of the Coven of Eagles,' Praedari added as he brandished his sinewy
arm. An eagle drawn with tiny detailed blue lines was there, its beak and eye
colored a golden yellow color, 'Who do you belong to?'
"I
looked at Jael and he shrugged with a smile. So I showed them my dragon tattoo
saying that I was of that coven. I conveniently forgot to mention that I was to
be Hermes' whipping boy.
"
'Ooh, a Dragon,' Praedari whistled, 'Lucky ass.'
"
'But he's got Lord Hermes' as an Elder,' Odysseus shot back at his friend, 'and
everyone knows he's got the feelings of a rock.'
"
'True but the Dragons are the High Coven,' Praedari argued, 'There is
always a price to pay for stature.'
"
'Don't you think Lord Hermes crosses the line just a mite,' Odysseus replied
sarcastically as he made a gesture with his thumb and forefinger, squinting his
eye as he stared through the circle his fingers made.
"
'Yeah but….'
"I
held up a hand before Praedari could finish his thought, 'Hermes might be a
complete maniac, however, I intend to try and make the best of things. If he
wants to be a bitch to everyone, he can go ahead, but I'm not gonna let that
sink my spirits.'
"Odysseus
giggled and Praedari crossed his arms as he muttered, 'Well things sure were
different when Lord Quince was alive. How his son got to such a rotter I'll
never know.'
"Jael
was pulling Praedari up and motioning for Odysseus and I to follow as Praedari
was speaking. He led the three of us down another hallway adjourning the
kitchens to a small room. It was what obviously had once been a small shrine
for private prayers; however, it had been reverted to a tiny armory. Jael
shooed Praedari and Odysseus to another door in the little room that was
partially hidden by a rack of axes.
"
'So, little Sheik,' Jael leaned on a large chest, 'I think I'd like to just see
you fool around with a sword today. Very basic things. Let me find a good one
for you.'
"He
turned and I saw in the dim light a whole wall covered with swords. All
different kinds from broadswords to light thin rapiers. Jael pulled a thin
sword down from the wall and handed it to me. It had a leather hilt and a
tarnished brass cross piece and a dirty crystal pommel stone.
"
'Hold it out. Yes, just like that,' he instructed me, 'Now slash it nice an'
quick like. Good. Now thrust it out. No, no, this one is no good.'
"He
came behind me and took my arm, holding it out straight. Then he pulled my arm
back and brought my arm through the motions of the stab once again, 'See how
you shake the blade nervously when you do this? It's too heavy for you.'
"I
pulled the sword away as he tried to take it away, 'No, wait Jael.'
"He
cocked his head, asking, 'Well don't you want a nice light sword that you can
whip around easily? That one is just a bit too heavy, and it might slow you
down. Every fraction of a second counts in a battle and a heavy sword might
cost you the two seconds you needed to stay alive.'
"
'True,' I admitted, 'but if I used a blade that was just a bit heavier, I could
work up my strength. If I train myself with a heavy sword, when I go to use a
lighter one for a duel, I'll be even quicker! I promise I'll only use the heavy
one for drilling.'
"
'You're mother taught you that?' he asked.
"I
shook my head yes. I told him that you had told me many little tricks to help
one with training. He said he'd lend an ear to any tips I had and he led me out
the door Praedari and Odysseus had went through earlier. I found myself in a
long room. This seemed to have once been a chapel. It was a long room lined
with tall stained glass windows. The pews no longer were in the middle of the
room and instead lined the walls just under the windows so the room was empty.
In the middle of the room, I saw Praedari and Odysseus playfully fencing with
each other, the tall red head watching them.
"
'No! Praedari!' Lysander stopped the two, 'Look, you're holding the sword
incorrectly again!'
"
'Aw, but Master Lysander, we're just goofing around!' Praedari complained as
Lysander tore the sword from Praedari's grasp.
"
'It doesn't matter what the hell you're doing,' Lysander said as he
curled Praedari's fingers around the hilt so he held the blade flat, 'When you
are using a sword, it is always important you understand what you're doing and
that you use the sword properly. Sword fighting is an art not be taken lightly!
It's like kindling a fire. If you are ignorant of what you are doing, the fire
will grow out of control and consume you.'
"Praedari
shuddered. He was about to thrust out at Odysseus again when he saw me standing
with Jael, 'Hey Sheik! C'mere!'
"Jael
gave me a shove as he said, 'Go ahead. I'll watch. Lysander is a much better
instructor than me.'
"I
came over a it timidly, my sword gripped in both hands nervously. I looked up
at the tall teen before me and then my eyes wandered from him to his short
little friend, hardly a head taller than me. And standing just beyond Odysseus
was Lysander. His flaming hair shone in the strange colored light the
stain-glassed windows brought into the room, 'Ah, Sheik. I trust you're first
night was enjoyable? Hn, do forgive us for our seemingly cruel behavior
yesterday, but do understand, we are in a bit of a tight situation here. So
much is going on at one time!'
"
'You have no idea,' I said. He studied me strangely as I said that, however
brushing it off and pushed through the two boys standing before him. He knelt
and took my sword, gripping the hilt, testing it in his hands and running his
fingers along the blade. He examined my arms, flexing them as if to see my
strength. He made no comments about the sword's weight and I was sure he either
approved of the sword being a bit heavy or he was oblivious to it or even maybe
that he didn't care.
"
'Let's just see what you know,' Lysander grinned sadistically. It was almost
scary, the look he had on his face as he beckoned for Odysseus to come over,
'Let's have a little match here. Figure out what the rookie can or can't do.'
"Odysseus
looked different than I remembered him from only a few moments before. Now,
instead of a bubbly friendly grin on his face and twinkling merry eyes, he had
this crazy aggressive look, his short brown hair fallen out of place and over
his forehead. His eyes were wide with excitement as though he lived to hear the
hum of a sword cut through the air.
"He
charged at me, swinging his rapier blade around at me in a neat crescent. I
raised my sword and effortlessly blocked him. He was a little slow, as though
he took time to make sure his movements were executed with immaculate
perfection. While such a thing was good for drilling, in a duel, it wasted too
much time, and I found myself gaining the upper hand.
"From
the block I held Odysseus' blade in, I turned on my heal with a tiny leap and
swung at him. I must have underestimated his speed, because no sooner had my
sword left the mutual lock of steels, his blade had met mine with another block
at his side. I am supposing his shortness and light weight made him quite agile
and quick on his feet. I knew my skills were probably not honed to perfection,
however, I felt I had what it took to beat him.
"Odysseus
jumped back, freeing our swords, 'Not bad Sheik! But you'll have to do better
to keep up with me!'
"I
gritted my teeth and charged at him. Just as I was about to shove my boot into
his chest and knock him down, he made a neat sidestep and was suddenly behind
me. I faltered and stumbled to my knees. I felt the cool tip of Odysseus' sword
at the back of my neck and I knew I had lost the duel.
"
'For the rookie, you're not bad,' Odysseus said as he helped me to my feet.
"Lysander
came between us, 'Yes, yes, you are rather good for a beginner. You're training
must have been rigorous in the past to be able to counter Odysseus. I
congratulate you little Sheik.'
"Praedari
was sitting on a nearby pew. He had discarded his sword and held in his hands
now, a long trident. I had heard of them before. It was like an advanced kind
of spear. One had to train for years with a spear before taking up a trident. I
wondered if Praedari was trained in that way.
"Lysander
saw me staring at Praedari and laughed. With a finger, he beckoned the boy
over. Praedari hefted his trident and came over to us. Lysander placed a hand
on Praedari's shoulder as he spoke, 'Praedari is an expert with this weapon.
Though this is his first year with it, his extensive study of the spear has
helped him hone his skill. I hope you will choose a weapon that suits you soon
so we can start your training.'
"
'Weapon that suits me?' I wondered aloud.
"Praedari
chuckled as he held the trident out to the side, 'You see, very early on, we
choose a weapon that our skills seem to excel in. I found my heart in the
trident, and so I took it up. Lysander and Jael will let you try many different
things so you can find a weapon best suited to you. Or maybe, the weapon will find
you!'
"I
shrugged, still not quite sure how a weapon could choose a person. Maybe it was
like destiny or something like that. Certainly, the future was something I
could relate to.
"For
the next few weeks it was like that. I would wake up early and go to the
monastery with Jael and I would train with various weapons with Praedari and
Odysseus. They seemed eager to help me master a weapon, however, no matter how
many we tried, I couldn't find one. I fought with an entire host of swords,
spears, throwing knives, axes and a great deal of others. We even grappled one
day! But the weapon I was looking for wasn't any of those.
"And
the more time Praedari, Odysseus and I spent together, the more I forgot about
being angry at these people. I made myself scarce to Hermes and I barely
encountered him during that time, much to my relief.
"But
one morning, as I strode into the chapel with Odysseus bouncing behind me,
giggling at talking so fast I could hardly understand him, and Praedari a few
paces behind, his mind far from us in some distant sea of dreams, I laid eyes
on Lysander, who was leaning on a tall longbow, Jael standing next to him with
a short bow and a large quiver of arrows.
"
'Today, we do archery!' Jael announced as we came in. I did a little leap of
joy. I had been rather skillful with the bow in my past. Maybe today I would
find the weapon made just for me.
"
'Damn, damn, damn,' Odysseus was mumbling. His bubbly mood had evaporated the
second Jael announced the day's training.
"
'Don't give me that bull,' Lysander slapped his son on the back. Odysseus began
to cough uncontrollably as Lysander went on, 'If you're going to be a
successful thief, you must be a master of many weapons, trades and techniques.
You never know what life will throw at you and you need to be ready.'
"
'Well I know and you know that I can't work those stupid bows,' Odysseus
snapped back tartly, 'So I don't see the point in trying.'
"
'All the more reason to practice,' Lysander shoved the longbow into Odysseus'
hands, 'Find a bow for Praedari and Sheik while Jael and I set up the targets.'
"Lysander
and Jael went off and Odysseus went into the little armory only to reappear a
few moments later with another longbow and two short bows. Also among these,
was a crossbow and three more quivers of arrows and a quiver of crossbow bolts.
It was almost too much for the vertically challenged Odysseus to carry, and he
stumbled forward, fumbling the bows and arrows while cursing loudly. All
Praedari and I could do was watch and laugh.
"Jael
returned with his bow and beckoned for the three of us to follow. He had drawn
a line with black paint across the marble floor several yards away from a pair
of targets that Lysander had hung on what remained of the chapel's altar. Jael
snitched an arrow from Odysseus, aimed and shot the arrow at one of the
targets, almost nailing a bull's-eye, 'Who's first?'
"Praedari
calmly snatched one of the longbows from Odysseus' array of bows and lined
himself up at the stripe of paint on the floor. I took the quiver of large
arrows from the faltering Odysseus and handed it to Praedari. Taking an arrow,
he closed his large amber eyes and notched the arrow in the bow. And then,
without a word, he let the arrow fly. It just avoided missing the target,
embedding itself in the outermost ring of the board.
"Lysander
was nodding and said happily, 'Very good Praedari. You must work a little
harder and then you will get it.'
"I
snickered, 'Praedari, no offense but you must be one horrendous archer if that
is considered good for you!'
"Jael
shook his head, 'You seem to not understand Sheik. He did exactly as we
instructed him.'
"
'I must really not understand then,' I replied, 'for I thought the idea was to
hit the target dead on.'
"
'You mustn't worry about it so much. You must let the arrow take its course and
in time, it will find its way to the target,' Jael answered me in a prophetic
sort of voice, 'First master the technique, and then you will be able to hit
the center.'
"
'If you think you can to do better, let's see it,' Praedari shoved his
longbow into my hands. The bow was crafted for an adult, and the weapon towered
at least a foot or two above my head.
"
'Not with that bow!' Lysander rooted through the bows Odysseus still had looped
over his body and gripped in his hands. He produced a small short bow and
handed it to me, 'This is more your size and will be easier to draw then that
big old thing.'
"Thwack!
The arrow buried itself in the dead center of the target. As did the next
arrow, and the next, and the arrow after that. Odysseus dropped all the bows
and arrows with a clatter and Praedari put a bony hand on his forehead, weaving
his thin fingers through his ocean green locks in amazement.
"
'I think,' Odysseus was bent on the floor picking up the strewn arrows, 'Jael
can work with him now. The bow is most certainly his weapon.'
"Lysander
sighed and knelt beside me as he whispered into my ear, 'You're form is
beautiful, however, you seem to take to much trouble aiming. Let loose your
soul, little Sheik, and allow your spirit to guide the arrow to the target.'
"I
sighed and stepped up to the line, closing my eyes and doing as Lysander
instructed. I pulled the string back to my ear, digging my teeth into my lower
lip. I was about to loose the arrow, when I heard the door behind us close with
a tiny click. I lowered the bow and turned around. Much to my dismay, I saw
Hermes standing at the back of the room with his arms crossed and his long
braid draped over his shoulder. I could feel his dark eyes on me, and I could
tell he had come for the soul purpose of seeing me.
His
boots clicked on the marble as he approached. Lysander straightened and greeted
him with a firm handshake, Hermes giving a small grunt in return. Then the
imposing thief turned to face me as he said in his deep voice, 'So how is the
runt doing? He had better hurry, for I'll need him in a few weeks.'
"
'Who hired you and how much are you being paid?' Lysander said merrily, his
voice ringing with a twang of sarcasm, 'You're a thieving dog! Just like your
father, that outlaw instinct comes second nature to ye!'
"Hermes
whipped one hand onto his hip and said with a sly grin, 'I got a friend who's
really into ancient texts. He said he's pay me a hefty sum to go raid the
ruined castle.'
"
'You can't do that!' I cut into the conversation, grabbing onto Lysander's
silken sleeve as I shoved between the two, 'The Royal Family's bound to come
back. They'll pick up all over again! Just because that damned Gerudo tore the
place apart while he was looking for the Holy Treasure doesn't mean you can
just ride in and loot the ruins!'
"
'Holy….' Lysander was staring at me.
"
'Treasure?' Hermes had a maniacal grin on his face.
"I
realized then what I had just blurted out. I had just hinted at the existence
of the Ocarina of Time! The key to the Sacred Realm and resting place of the
Triforce! I slapped myself in my stupidity. Hermes was mumbling about me being
of more worth than he had previously thought. Praedari and Odysseus were
arguing over which one of them was a bigger moron.
"Suddenly,
Hermes was on his knees, his hands on my shoulders and staring into my eyes
with a determined look on his face, 'Are we talking mountains of gold!? Jewels
and necklaces?'
"I
shook my head and Hermes glared at me as he shook me, 'Then what the hell is
it!?'
"
'I cannot say. It is a secret guarded by the Royal Family,' I pulled out of his
tight grip. Hermes plucked the crossbow off the ground and fired it. The bolt
whizzed mere millimeters from my head, shearing a stray wisp or two of hair
from my head.
"
'Spill it kid,' Hermes loaded the crossbow with another bolt, 'How do you know
what kinds of treasures are at the castle? Who told you about these things?'
"
'The princess,' I replied simply as I rallied his crossbow with a smart arrow
shot by his head.
"He
fired at me in return, almost as if this little exchange had become some sort
of game, 'Well whether you tell me or not, you're coming with me next week to
the castle. I need some pocket change, got it?'
"I
rolled my eyes as I drew another arrow to shoot back at him, 'Whatever, ya
great Braided Brat.'
"
'Will you stop calling me that!?' he hurled the entire crossbow at me,'
I'm you're Elder! Don't mock me!'
"
'You're just saying that 'cause you aren't used to someone with a snappy tongue
being around to question you're authority you spoilt baby!' I made a nasty face
as I chucked the crossbow back at him.
"All
this time, Lysander, Jael, Praedari and Odysseus were standing back, watching
us argue. I'm sure Praedari and Odysseus were wondering what in the hell was
going on. Jael probably was amused at Hermes finally getting what was coming
and Lysander was just shaking his head in amazement at my rashness.
"Hermes
stood as he stroked his jaw. He spat at me and swore and then he looked at
Lysander. Walking over to the red haired man, Hermes muttered, 'And while
you're at it, get his attitude problem under control. I detest being
demoralized in front of people who respect me.'
"Lysander
nodded and turned to me with a sort of warning glare in his eye. I gulped and
slinked behind Jael who put a comforting hand on my head."
Impa
was riveted, staring at Zelda as she scribbled furiously on the page, "Yeah,
and then what?"
Zelda
waved her hand, "Let me speak, please!"
Impa
nodded and rolled her quill between her hands and then nodded slightly as a
signal for Zelda to begin again. The princess was about to open her mouth when
she caught sight of a barmaid. Calling the shapely young woman over, Zelda
asked for a tankard of ale. Both Impa and the barmaid looked at Zelda a bit
strangely. A woman, particularly an aristocratic woman, wasn't usually found
ordering beer.
Zelda
shrugged, "So I developed a taste for cold hard alcohol over these years too.
Give it a rest!"
"Jael eased the little boat into
the wharf in the catacombs near Hermes' iron stair and my quarters. Leaping out
of the boat with me in his sinewy arms, he dropped me in a joking manner into a
heap upon the floor. Giggling I chased him down the hall to my room. He laughed,
'See, when you don't think about your mother or Hermes, you seem to be happy
enough. I think you'll grow to love this life of dishonesty soon.'
"I crossed my arms and pouted,
'I just want to know what makes that Hermes fellow tick. The way his brain is
rigged up, you can almost hear the cranks rusting and the pulleys snapping.
Jeez….'
"Jael found that to be immensely
funny and slapped me hard on the back, 'For a little thing only yay high,'—he
motioned to his hip—'you're pretty damn funny, Sheik.'
"I smiled at this, happy that he
was amused at my intelligence. I for one had never thought myself to be very
funny. My father and most the people I grew up around thought my clever and
cynical retorts were horribly unladylike. Here I could let loose.
" 'So,' Jael leaned up against
the wall, squishing a spider with his thumb as he spoke, 'Vans tells me that
you grew up at the castle. Is that why you don't want to go with Hermes?'
"I nodded, 'It's my home. Most
of my friends and just about all my family and everything I've ever known are
lying in there somewhere… save the princess… she got out. I don't want to
desecrate the place. What's his deal with wanting to go there?'
"Jael shrugged, 'Hermes loves
more that anything, money. He'll do just about anything so long as he's being
paid. Some of his connections in the upper classes of Hyrule pay him to steal
for them. Guess this is one of those.'
" 'But why bring me along?' I
protested.
"Jael shrugged again, 'You're a
thief now and I guess he wants you to see what it's like or something. Who
knows with him! Anyway, soon Hermes will be over his head with training and
preparation to become our leader. Might not seem like much to you, since you
grew up around real royalty, however, down here in the underworld, we have to
have our laws and status. You just might have to help him out. You understand?'
" 'I guess so,' I replied, my
voice scratchier and lower than I usually made it.
"He snapped up and pounded his
fist into his palm, 'So tell me what it was like at the castle! The princess,
is she as beautiful as everyone says!? And the soldiers, you must tell me about
the soldiers! What's it like!? Tell me everything!'
"I sucked in a huge breath and
launched into a speech about my past life, making sure to speak from through
the eyes of Sheik, not Princess Zelda. I told him, as we walked down the long
halls of the crypt, past my room and further into the heart of the catacombs,
about the beautiful gardens and bubbling fountains in the castle and about the
exquisite architecture of the castle itself. I explained in detail the exact
procedure the soldiers went through at their drillings and what it was like to
see the Royal Changing of the Guard. I spoke of the Royal Family and what it
was like in the Royal Court. Jael was intrigued by every aspect of the whole
thing and when I was finished and we were sitting on the edge of another wharf
at the other end of the hall, he wanted to know more, even though I insisted
there wasn't much else to say.
" 'Vans was telling me about
what you said about the Princess,' Jael seemed extremely lively, 'I want to
hear more…. about her I mean.'
"I chuckled inwardly as I
thought to myself, If only you knew… Holy Nayru is it hard to talk about and
praise myself.
"He knelt down to the ground,
reaching into the murky waters and scooping up a handful which he splashed at
me with a tiny flick of his wrist, 'What's with you!? Speak already!'
"I shivered and plopped down
next to him, head cradled in palm as I said, 'Well… the princess… she's…
beautiful! I mean, I'm just a little kid so I never really noticed but my mama
says….'
" 'Aw, come on Sheik,' Jael
grinned mischievously, 'You're a growing boy. Don't tell me you don't notice a
pretty girl when you see one.'
" 'Well, maybe I'm not cut out
for this kind of discussion,' I said, 'Wait 'till I'm bigger with raging
hormones and maybe then I'll tell you lovely stories about the princess,
alright?'
"Jael blurted out laughing as he
choked out between sobbing chuckles, 'Alright, boy. We'll do that then. Is that
a promise?'
"I nodded, 'Of course.'
"By this time, I was feeling the
cool draft of sleep coursing through my body. I had had a long day. After the
archery and the incident with Hermes, I had run myself ragged, pushing my body
and letting arrows rip from my bow faster than I could count. My arms ached and
my eyes were tired from staring at the target all day. I murmured as I began to
stumble back down the hall towards my quarters, 'Jael… I need to… sleep. Good…
goodnight.'
"He smiled and stretched his
arms, a drowsy grin on his face as he reached up, standing on the tips of his
toes, ''Night lil' Sheik.'
"I walked down the hall, rubbing
my eyes and yawning every few moments. After what seemed like an eternity I was
in that cold room of mine. Lighting a small kerosene lamp, I shed my jerkin and
loosened my hair from the ribbon, letting it fall over my shoulders. I found
myself standing before a tall mirror, examining myself. I almost couldn't
recognize the person watching me from the other side of the glass with drooping
eyelids. I saw no longer a princess, but a rugged little terror neither girl
nor boy. But while my personality was shaped into that of a small boy, I still
saw a small scared lonely little girl. Loneliness… that's what I felt. So I had
my friends… Praedari and Odysseus… and Jael, Vans, Lysander…. Ah, but none of
them knew me. Not really. They knew Sheik. They never knew nor cared for Zelda.
Zelda was a nobody with no one. Zelda was alone and forgotten. Who loved her? Nobody….
"I sighed, a tear rolling down
my cheek, as I crumpled into a pile on the floor before the mirror. I tucked my
knees against my little chest, rolled up like a wad of misery. And then more
tears came, for I felt nothing but remorse. How could I live like this? I
couldn't carry this on forever. They were bound to learn the truth sooner or
later. And with that whole Code of Honor that these people held so dear, they
might see it fit to punish me and then if that were so, how would I help Link…
so he could help Hyrule live?
" 'I hate my life!' I screamed
as a pounded a fist on the carpeted floor. My hand stung as it met the ground.
I rolled over, and then brought myself to my feet, quivering with rage and
sadness and regret. In my anger, I hurled the first thing my hands could grab
to the floor. My fingers closed around a box. As I groped it to find a way to
grab hold of it, I felt tiny carvings and crystals worked into its smooth
wooden body. I hooked my fingers around a little crank like protrusion on its
side and yanked it from its perch on a tripod.
"It dropped with a loud noise as
I flung it to the ground. The lid flew open as it made contact and the crank
began to turn as the box emitted a little tune. I fell to my knees still
sobbing a little to see if I had broken it. I turned the box upright.
Underneath the lid was a stretch of fine silver strings on an ebony loom like
structure spanning the box. The strings at one end were longer than the ones at
the other and to my dismay two had been snapped. A cylinder with small knobs
placed over it slowly turned, the knobs gently stroking the strings and pulling
the notes together to make the beautiful little tune I heard then.
"I sat there and let the drum
just rotate and play the music. After a few minutes, the crank stopped turning
and the music stopped playing. I stared at the box dumbly for a moment and then
reached to crank it back up again. And even though the music was missing those
two notes, it still sounded wonderful. It would be easy enough to repair.
Lifting the music box, I laid it on my bedside table, and fell asleep to its
lulling sounds.
"That night I dreamt again. I
was surrounded by a deep blue shadow. Before me was a figure bathed in a beam
of golden light. He sat on a low stool, gently strumming a golden harp. His
face was shadowed and in that golden light I could just make out his features.
He wore a skintight blue Sheikan garb, his faced wrapped up in white cloth and
his long blond hair hidden beneath bandages. I heard his voice quietly humming
the tune he played, the music box tune.
"I came closer, a hand shielding
my eyes from the brilliant rays of light. The closer I came, the more I saw.
And soon, I was able to make out another figure there. He sat at the foot of
the mysterious Shiekan's stool, his head resting on the harpist's knee. His
eyes were closed and he looked as though he were asleep. It was that adult Link
again who slept there. How innocent he looked!
"Oh! What did it mean? What did
it mean? What did it mean? Why did I have these dreams about him? Was he
sleeping? What had happened to Link!?"
"Why do you have these recurring
dreams? What did they mean?" Impa stopped writing for a moment to stretch her
cramped fingers.
Sighing, Zelda slurped a great
chug of her beer and said, "At that exact point in time, I did not know.
However, the next night, I had the dream again. And the night after that and
after that and so on and so forth. Until one night…. One night I had that dream
and instead of just fading away like it usually did, it continued, and then I
learned the fate of my hero…."
"Another figure emerged from
behind the pair that night in the dream. He was short and stocky, his girth
robed in an ornate monk's habit. He had a trim white beard and a little rattail
of hair sticking out behind his head. He stopped beside Link and ran his
fingers through Link's golden hair, traced his firm jaw and ran his finger down
the sleeping man's spine. 'Sleeping well, hero?' he whispered in a throaty
voice as he twirled a wisp of Link's blonde hair around his fingers.
" 'Sleeping?' I said to the man.
He laughed a deep laugh and said nothing, just stroked Link's neck and watched
the hero's body rise and fall with every breath. I might add that the harpist
had not even noticed this rude violation of Link. He just played and hummed,
not paying anything any mind and simply looked forlorn.
" 'Hush now, he sleeps,' the man
murmured to no one in particular, though I do think he meant to inform me, 'See
how he sleeps. See how he grows. He will become the hero one day. Hero…. Hero…
Hero….'
"I awoke in the day very, very,
very late, almost dusk, to hear the sounds of someone whistling in my room.
Sitting up in the bed, I saw Vans standing on the other end of the room, close
to the mirror, a large black cage at his feet as he cleared a spot on the
nearby bureau.
" 'Vans… what are you
doing?' I asked as I slinked beneath the covers once more.
"Vans stooped to lift the cage
up by the chain. Inside I saw a small Hylian goldfinch fluffing its little
feathered body up and squeaking merrily. Vans stopped whistling as he spoke,
'Well Praedari snitched this beauty a few days ago but I ain't got anywhere in
my quarters to keep it an' since you have….'
" 'Okay, okay,' I shivered in
the evening air, 'I get the message. The bird can stay.'
"As soon as he had finished with
the goldfinch, Vans dragged a chair up next to my bed. Swinging a leg over it
so he straddled the seat backwards and resting his folded arms and head on the
back of the chair he said to me, 'So, you got you're first big job with Lord
Hermes today.'
" 'Really….' I rolled my eyes,
then muttering sarcastically, 'And please stop addressing him as a lord.'
" 'Sorry, sorry,' Vans sighed,
'That's just what we're all used to calling him. You know, ever since you
showed up, things have changed.'
" 'Oh yeah?' I chuckled, 'Sure…
you go ahead and tell yourself that. Like I could influence you people at all.'
" 'Yeah, look Hermes for
instance,' Vans replied, 'He can't take being bested in an argument. And look
at you! You're what, nine years old? And you have an answer for everything.' He
shook his head, obsidian black locks tumbling into his eyes as he did so.
" 'I've always been this way,' I
said, pompously crossing my arms.
" 'Have you now?' he ruffled my
matted hair affectionately. I nodded.
"He stood, 'Yes, well, you just
might want to get cleaned up. Hermes will be expecting you promptly at dusk, so
if you are going to do so, do it quickly!' He strode out of the room with his
hands shoved into pockets hidden beneath the skirt of his tunic. I couldn't
help but to stare at his tiny hips and his muscled build.
"He
stopped, 'Well aren't you coming? Come on, I don't think you've bathed since
you got here. That's sort of sick. Even one of us can't go that long without a
bath. What's up? You too good to bathe with people like us?' He gave me a
mocking sneering look.
"
'As a matter of fact, no,' I retorted, 'Fine, I'm coming.'
"What
a mess this was though! I couldn't help but think of what a bath could possibly
do to me and my cover as I followed Vans to the boat. He leapt in, as did I.
Soon we were floating into another nook that I had not yet been to.
"Here
there was a stone stair sloping in front of the edge of the ledge above. An
iron fence with spikes along the top lined the stairs and the end of the ledge
above. Tying the boat's rigging to the base of the fence, Vans led me up the
steps. At the top there was a hall that branched in two different directions. A
fire burned in a dish sitting atop a tripod at the spot where the hall split.
"Vans
led me down the left hall, 'The other way leads to Jael and my own quarters.
The other Dragons are down that way too, and a few are this way, near the
baths.'
"
'Catacombs with baths?' I put my hands behind my head, 'I have to see it to
believe it.'
"Vans
chuckled as he whipped around, walking backwards, 'We did them ourselves. Like
whoever built this place would put baths in. No, we rooted the pipes and such
to this one large room and built in the showers and tubs and everything.'
"
'You bathe in that muck water that the boats are in? No hot water either, I
bet.' I wrinkled my nose in disgust, 'It's almost better if I don't take one.'
"Vans
did a little snappy jump in the air as he said, 'That's what you might
think, however, we once had a woman who could do magic and she put an
enchantment on the pipe work to make warm and purified water. Ain't that
clever?'
"
'Magic?' my eyes were wide and interested.
"Vans
seemed pleased that he had struck another interest of mine, 'Yep, yep, magic!'
He stopped before a large oak door and pushed it inwards. Inside was one of the
most wonderful places I'd seen yet in this nest of thieves. The arched
sandstone walls sported sconces beneath each curve and two more sets of arches
and pillars to support the ceiling of the huge room ran at lengthways down the
room sort of splitting the room into thirds. The floor had been retiled with
large slabs of marble. In the center of the room was a large sunken pool filled
with steamy water. A small cascade of clear steamy water gurgled into the pool
with a splash, keeping it constantly filled.
"Vans
showed me to a bench beneath one of the rows of arches, 'Here, put your clothes
on this and I'll just go right over there' —he strolled to the next bench,
several arches away and hidden by a pillar—'and put my things right here.'
"I
had no idea what to do. If I stripped, he would know I was a female. I was
wringing my hands and seeing a towel thrown beneath the bench, I knew there was
only one chance for me to make it through this little ordeal easer. Sure, there
was a great deal of risk, but not bathing would arouse more suspicion. Next
time though, I would prepare carefully for bathing and come here alone.
"Snatching
it up and wrapping myself in it, I shed my clothes down to my undergarments. I
wasn't going to take any chances. And then, chuckling sheepishly to myself, I
walked toward the pool, dipping m foot into the water and stirring it around a
little with my foot. Then I quickly slid in and sunk down so the waterline was
just under my nose.
"I
heard a whoop and a splash as Vans came bounding into the water. Giggling, he
swam over to me and grabbed me in a fierce headlock, 'What's up with you lil'
Sheik? Hiding under a towel an' under the water like that. It ain't like you
never seen a naked guy before.'
"I
let out a nervous laugh of agreement. It didn't click in my mind that Vans was
nude until he mentioned it. I found myself bright red with embarrassment as I
sunk completely under the water, closing my eyes tightly. I felt Vans' large
hands grab my arm tightly, pulling me up from under the gently lapping waves,
nearly loosing my towel in the process. I squealed fighting to keep my lower
half covered as Vans shook me, his eyes wide with what seemed like concern,
'What's up? Ya sick? Are you okay Sheik, 'cause you're acting a lil' strange!'
"The
water sloshed against his hard chest and dripped from his thick black bangs.
His tattoos looked bolder now that they were wet and he looked even more rugged
than usual when he was drenched with water. He came over next to me, and handed
me a heavy bar of lemon scented soap, 'Scrub up nice an' quick like. Hermes
will kill us if we're late.' He sat down on the ledge under the water that ran
around the perimeter of the pool, his arms resting outstretched on the edge of
the pool.
"Taking
the bar of soap, I began to wash, careful not to attract to much attention to
myself. Fortunately, it looked as though Vans had dozed off into a light sleep,
his eyes closed as he reclined against the pool wall. I started to hum the
music box tune as I ran the bar of soap over my arms and down my torso. I saw
Vans grin a little, his tongue slipping out from his mouth and slowly tracing
his lower lip.
"
'Pretty little tune you got there,' I heard him murmur, his mouth hardly moving
at all, 'I've heard it somewhere before.'
"
'I found a music box in my room,' I explained, 'I like it.'
"Vans
laughed a little, his eyes still closed, 'Must have been Hermes' at one time.
Most the stuff in there is. He just can't fit all that extra crap into his
quarters, that's why its there.'
"I
frowned, 'Even so, I still think it is nice. Someone as ill tempered as Hermes
wouldn't understand a beautiful song.'
"Vans
snorted, his eyes still lazily closed and his mouth still quirked in that smug
little grin, 'Perhaps. Ah, but there's more to Lord Hermes than what meets the
eye. Maybe one day you'll understand.'
"I
said nothing to that, and in fact, we didn't speak at all until Vans rose from
the pool, saying that it was time to leave. Reluctant to go, yes I was,
however, I was more than ready to impress Hermes with my skills, so without
much protest, I crept out of the water and discreetly and quickly redressed.
"And
then, before I knew it, Vans and I were back in our little boat, the fore
lantern swinging gently as we rocked down the canal. Vans returned to the wharf
with the iron spiral stairs up to Hermes' townhouse, and up there we went. I
was not surprised to find that Hermes was nowhere to be found.
"
'Hermes,' Vans was shouting as he came up the iron stairs into the sitting
room, 'Hermes where are you!?'
"I
shrugged, 'Eh, too bad. Might as well just go get something to ea—'
"Vans
held up a hand, waving my suggestion off, 'No, no he's around here somewhere.
Why don't you go check upstairs? He's bound to be there.'
"Shrugging
yet again (a gesture I found myself using as a simple answer quite often) I
mounted the creaking wooden stairs and climbed up. I found myself facing a door
as I reached the top of the stairs. The hall turned and lined the wall, so the
next staircase was rising up to the next floor in the same direction; right
over the one I had just climbed.
"Three
doors, besides the one facing the stairs, were in the hall, and then another at
the foot of the next staircase, each of them closed. Behind the first, the door
in front of the steps was a small storage room, filled to the rafters with
silks, jewelry, swords and other wonderful things that I assumed were just part
of a collection of stolen goods.
"Another
door hid a study with a desk covered in texts and books. Six lamps were lit;
each hanging from silken tasseled ropes from the ceiling. The two huge windows
were cracked open, the curtain rods bare. A huge map of Hyrule hung on one wall
and a wall scroll bearing an ink sketch of a bearded old man hung opposite it.
I might add that I couldn't help but notice a small, framed portrait of a
beautiful young woman sitting on the desk. The floor was covered with a plush
royal blue carpet, tiny little gold patterns twisting all over it, colors that
complimented the periwinkle painted walls nicely.
"And
behind the next door, I found a small bedroom, walls of pale rose pink, with a
single person bed, its frame of heavy oak. At least four down comforters were
flung over the mattress and a green knit afghan was folded neatly at the foot.
Nothing but a matching green throw rug covered the floor. A tripod bearing a
lamp stood in the corner, its exposed little flame blown out from the breeze
blowing in through the single open window, large just like all the other
windows in the house, the translucent curtains billowing around the
window-frame. A little writing table was pushed up against the bare wall
opposite the bed and in the corner was a huge overstuffed chair covered with
pillows.
"Next
came another rather small room, big enough for only one window. This room was
barren of furniture, save a simple wooden chair that faced the window, a harp
lying on the hard seat. A simple music stand was nearby supporting a few pages
of sheet music. The walls were ashen white, no curtains hanging on the window.
There seemed to be a few nails in the wall, as though at one time there had
been pictures hanging there. The room depressed me.
"Finally,
the last room at the foot of the next flight of stairs was the most wonderful
of all. A library it was. The walls were covered with built in bookcases, save
three places where there were windows. Like the wine rack downstairs, there was
a ladder that rolled along the shelves so one could reach books on the topmost
places. A lush burgundy carpet covered nearly all the floor, two leather chairs
facing the two open windows, a table sporting a silver kerosene lamp between
the two chairs.
"I
closed the door, not seeing Hermes in any of these rooms. I realized he must be
up that last flight of stairs. With a heavy sigh, I began to climb.
"The
room that greeted me on this top and final floor was nothing but a huge loft
bedroom. A huge bed layered with quilts and coverlets and piled with pillows
dominated the room. Like my own bedroom, many tapestries and wall hangings
adorned the walls. Lamps of all shapes and sizes sat on the bureau and the desk
and just about every other surface as well as hanging from the ceiling. And
flopped on the bed, was Hermes, an open book resting facedown on his chest and
his arm over his head.
"I
stormed over to the bed and shook him, 'Wake up your lazy ass Hermes!'
"He
rolled over, his face looking tired and overworked, but when he saw me, that
tired face melted into an outright pissed of scowl, 'The hell are you doing in
my room?'
"I
crossed my arms, stuck out my tongue and retorted, 'Vans told me to look for
you. I'll have you know that we busted our asses to get here on time only to
find you asleep. Please….'
"He
sat up, throwing the book aside, 'I'm coming. Get downstairs. We'll be going
soon.'
"When
I came downstairs, Vans was sleeping on the sofa. I ruffled his hair and threw
a blanket over him. In his sleep, he snuggled the folds of the coverlet over
his slim body.
"
'Hey runt!' I heard Hermes shouting as he came down the stairs. His feet made
no sound, but his voice sure did, 'Let's go. Get your gear and we'll go.'
"
'Gear?' I looked at him confused. He slapped his head in frustration and came
down the stairs completely.
"
'What do you need? A bow?' he asked, his voice gruff, as he opened a large
cupboard at the base of the staircase. I nodded and he pulled a short bow from
the closet and threw it towards me. Fortunately, I caught it, an action that
seemed to impress him somewhat; he raised an eyebrow as he ran a finger along
each blade of his twin swords before strapping them to his back.
"
'So let's go,' he motioned for me and we exited the house via the front door.
"We
were now standing on the cobblestone street in front of the townhouse. The road
was blackened with ash that the wind had carried through the streets of the
city from the disastrous fires at the castle. From there, I could see the
spires of the castle rising over the city on the hill where it once
majestically stood. The few houses on the road leading up to the ruins had
suffered as well, their walls black, burned and crumbled.
"He
began to walk towards the castle, with me close at his heals; so close in fact,
that sometimes his braid would swing out and lash my face as it swayed with his
every step.
"Soon,
we were following the path to the castle, however, we did not go up to the tall
ornate iron gate at the end of the road. Instead, we cut between two broken
manors to a section of the tall castle fence that was far from the main street.
As Hermes crept up to the iron barred fence, I hissed at him with a tone of
disdain, 'Why do you need to be so damn secretive. For Din's sake, it ain't
like anyone's around anymore.'
"Hermes
did not turn to look at me, but still growled a response, 'You don't know that
for sure. Taking into account that a Gerudo did all this, one can never be too
careful as what to expect.'
"I
said nothing, knowing he was actually right. Ganondorf had destroyed the castle
for a reason. Perhaps he had realized that in his rather bold assault, he had
overlooked the ocarina. Maybe he was still….
"My
train of thought, however, was interrupted by Hermes once more, 'And that
treasure… what is it? What did you do with it? Tell me!?'
"I
almost slipped, and told him that I had given it to the hero. Catching myself
though, I quickly said that I had no idea; that the princess had taken it with
her in her flight from the castle.
"
'Then where is the princess?' he asked as he produced a tiny dagger from his
boot. The little knife caught my attention, its edge honed to the sharpest
point I'd ever seen. It seemed to be enchanted, for tiny little runes swirled
inside the metal blade and along the handle. 'Tell me!' he snapped as he used
the dagger to neatly saw through the iron bars of the fence.
"Overcoming
my amazement over the little tool I quickly said with a hint of arrogance, 'She
is in hiding. Where I do not know. She waits for the Hero….'
"
'What hero?' Hermes didn't look up as he began to cut another bar away from the
fence, his brow knit and his teeth grinding together as he worked.
"I
rolled my eyes, 'Don't you know the Legend?'
"
'Legends are for weaklings with nothing but the ideas of a God to rely on,' he
said simply, bluntly, 'No one believes in the old tales anymore. Certainly not
a person like me. I have to see it to believe it.'
"I
spat out my words like venom, angry that he doubted the existence of the Three,
'Well the story has followed the Legend thus far. A supreme evil has plagued
the land and the princess took the Holy Treasure to the destined hero so he
could open the Sacred Realm. She waits now for him to return with the
Triforce.' But as I spoke, I realized that he should have come back by now.
Something had happened to him. What had happened to Link?
"
'A load of filthy lies,' Hermes replied angrily as he stepped through the
fence, 'Stop wasting time and get your ass in here.'
"He
led the way towards the blackened castle. Arches and towers had collapsed, the
moat run dry. The glass in the windows had been blown to shards from the panes.
Rubble crunched under our feet and the creaking wood of falling trusses echoed
above. The iron detail work and the carved walls were bent and deteriorated.
Seeing all this simply made my loathing of Ganondorf rise to an irrepressible
peak.
"
'You used to live here,' Hermes snarled as he looked up at the massive ruin
before us, 'The hell would they keep the books?'
"I
looked up. I could see the arched windows of the library just above us. Drawing
an arrow and taking aim, I fired it at the window. The arrow splintered the
cracked glass on the window apart, embedding itself in the windowpane. 'There,'
was my blunt answer.
"Hermes
looked up where I had shot the arrow, his mouth curled in a frown as he
examined the wall and the damage for a way to climb up.
"I
tugged his tunic gingerly as I said, 'I know the way up through the inside if
you'd rather go that way.'
"
'No!' he snapped, 'I ain't tromping through this mess for my health… nor am I
doing it to be a hero or adventurer of any kind. I'm doing this for money and I
want to be alive to collect my earnings. I ain't gonna take advice from a
rookie who ain't even been out in the real world in his entire life!'
"I
crossed my arms and turned away, watching Hermes through the corner of my eye.
He was loosing a long grappling hook and rope from his belt. Swinging it above
his head, he threw the weighted catch up at the widow, grabbing the sill.
Giving the rope a tug, he began to shimmy up with a quick snort for me to
follow.
"Reaching
the window, he swung into the library, with me following close. The room was
nothing like I remembered it. The shelves had fallen in their bookcases,
landing on top of piles of fallen texts. And the large desk had collapsed onto
the floor. Chairs, tables and other furniture and decorative ornaments had
fallen over. Even the door hung on a hinge, the top of the doorframe crumbled
down to the ground.
"He
knelt by the piles of books on the ground, 'What a waste. Rookie! Come here!'
"I
crouched behind him as he reached into his pouch and produced a pair of black
leather gloves which he slid onto his hands. Then he began to clear some of the
debris away from the books. He snapped at me to tell him if I saw anything of
value.
"
'What's with the gloves?' I asked.
"He
gingerly lifted an olive green book with gold leafing on the pages. With a
sadistic grin he said, 'If you're going to do a job, might as well do it right.
I ain't about to leave a single trace that I was even here.'
"
'Like anyone would even care anymore,' I sighed. Reaching towards a large
leather-bound book, I said, 'That might be worth something. It's an anthology
of Sheikan myths known only to the Royal Family. Zelda would have mama read
that to her all the time.'
"Hermes
spat and then took the book and placed it on a pile with a few others he had
selected. Wrapping them carefully in a bundle of silk, he stood up and made for
the window again, quieter than my breathing. 'Crap,' I heard him swear under
his breath.
"
'What is it?' I followed him and looked out the window. The rope we had climbed
up on had come loose from the hook and fallen to the ground below. 'Oh,' I
answered my own question as I realized that we had no way to get back down.
Hermes frowned at me and then back out the window.
"
'This way!' I said suddenly as I began to walk towards the door. I knew the way
back through the castle. Sure, I had no idea what lay in wait inside those
halls, nor was I sure of the condition of the structure and I couldn't be
certain that the way was free of blockage. However, it was better than staying
there.
"
'Where are you going?' he asked as he picked his way over the rubble after me.
"
'I'll take us home,' I said wearily as I knocked the door open, tearing it
clean of its hinge. The hallway just outside was in complete disarray; nothing
like how I remembered it to be. The marble beneath my feet was cracked a broken
and the curtains that had once hung over tall windows had been torn to shreds
and lay on the floor. There was wreckage everywhere and not much remained of
the home I once knew. I heard echoes of the wind whistling through the halls.
"Suddenly,
there was a loud crash. I grabbed Hermes' hand and dragged him down the hall to
the top of the grand staircase at the front of the castle. At the bottom was a
tall red haired Gerudo woman wearing light pink Arabian pants and a small strip
of cloth covering her chest. Her face was masked by another cloth, which she wore
over her nose and mouth. She carried a tall scimitar with two little bells
dangling from a red ribbon near the blade. At her feet was a broken vase and in
her hands was a small scroll. Her eyes narrowed as she saw the two of us dash
out of the darkness.
"
'Who are you!?' she snarled as she quickly pushed the scroll securely between
her breasts.
"I
was about to say something brash when Hermes knocked me aside into the remains
of a torn tapestry fallen to the ground. He gripped his parcel of books tightly,
gritting his teeth as he snapped back the woman, his voice even crueler than
ever, 'What's it to you bitch? I could ask you the same thing."
"She
leaned the scimitar on her shoulder, crossing her arms over it and turning her
head, her eyes glaring up at Hermes as she snapped back, 'No business of
yours.'
"I
had, by this time, straggled to my feet and I stumbled over to where Hermes
stood. I shouted down at her what I had meant to say before Hermes hit me, 'Hey
you rotten little whore, if you have anything to do with that scum, Ganondorf,
which you do, no doubt, I'll kill you!'
"She
let her big amber eyes wander from Hermes to me, 'Little boy's got a rotten
temper! How dare you! You should be taught a lesson.' With that, she whipped
from her belt three sharp throwing spike which she hurled up at us so fast I
hardly saw her hand move.
"Just
as the three dagger-like projectiles were about to impale me, Hermes shoved me
aside again into the wall. He stumbled and then fell on top of me, his braid
whipping in the air as he fell to the floor. I shoved him off me, and he rolled
into the corner with a groan as I stood.
The
Gerudo had climbed the stairs and now stood opposite me. She laughed as she
said, 'Well, you've seen me and spoken to me. A good Gerudo thief, that which I
am, never lets one who has seen her live.'
"I
drew an arrow and nocked it in my bow. Raising the weapon, I threatened her,
'And I, a good Dragon thief, never lets one who has seen me live.'
"
'Die,' she frowned at me cruelly, baring her teeth as she cocked her scimitar
at me, the bells jangling as she pointed the deadly tip of the blade at me.
Suddenly, she charged at me, shoving the scimitar forward as to run me through.
I was panicking, my eyes darting from side to side and up and down in search of
a way to escape this certain doom. Above me, a long spar of wood jutted out
from the large broken window to my left. Without another thought, I leapt up,
grabbing the wooden beam, its splintered surface cutting into my hands. The
Gerudo skidded to a stop beneath me as she realized I was no longer there.
"
'Up here you big horse's ass!' I let go of the bar and dropped down. She was
right beneath me as I nailed her square in the face with my feet as I came
down. I neatly jumped to the ground. The Gerudo was slowly climbing to her
feet, her hand clamped against her nose, blood leaking between her fingers. My
hands were full of splinters and tiny specks of blood bubbled up from the
little rippings in my skin.
"She
lowered the scimitar and prepared to charge me again. This time, I was ready
for her. I leapt up in the air, whipping my bow from around my shoulders and
tearing an arrow from the quiver at my hip. As she hurtled beneath me, I loosed
the arrow from my bow, the arrow zinging down between her eyes as I fell
gracefully to the floor. Her eyes widened and her mouth opened and closed a few
times as she slowly reached up, touching the arrow gingerly. Then she looked at
me and nodded somewhat before she collapsed to the ground.
"By
this time, Hermes had climbed to his feet, stumbling over to where I was,
'Amazing! The hell did you get all that skill from?'
"I
crossed my arms, 'See, I am useful for something.'
"He
smiled a little, 'So you are, I guess. Lysander and Jael were doing a damn good
job with your training. Maybe you won't be such a screw up after all.'
"
'Thanks for your support,' I muttered under my breath as I turned away. Perking
up a little, I said in a sapped voice, 'This way Lord Hermes. The
entrance to the castle is close.'
"I
leapt down the stairs two at a time, Hermes close behind me. He was struggling,
his ankle seemingly injured, and he lagged after me a little bit with his
bundle of loot and I stopped halfway though the grand hall to offer some help.
Reluctantly, he gave in and handed me the package, leaning on my shoulder to
help him along.
"
'You're awful damn small for a boy,' he commented weakly, coughing a little,
'Where's your muscle?'
"
'My father was small,' I said quickly. Thankfully, he seemed to buy that and
said nothing more. We were now outside the castle wall, stumbling down the long
road back into town. Along the way, Hermes buckled over in a coughing fit. I
staggered to the ground next to him, rubbing his back and asking what was
wrong.
"
'Nothing, nothing,' he managed to say before coughing again. I decided we had
better hurry back to his townhouse before he became to weak to move at all."
"What
is this? What is wrong with him?" Impa asked as she dipped a finger into
Zelda's tankard of ale to taste.
"Impa,
has it occurred to you that I will get to all the answers to your questions in
time?" Zelda retorted sharply pulling her beer from Impa's reach and taking a
long hard drink, "Please, let me speak! You just write!"
Impa
pouted, crossing her arms as she licked her lips, "Fine, fine."
"Jeez,
you're like a little kid!" she waved the barmaid down again, asking for two
more mugs of ale; one for her and one for Impa.
"It
wasn't long before we reached the townhouse. I dragged Hermes up the front
steps and into the sitting room where I dumped him over the arm of the sofa. He
felt around for a grip and pushed himself up, only to tumble back onto the
couch with another round of coughs. I wasn't quite sure, but I thought for a
moment that I saw a line of thick blood trail from his lip to his fingers.
"
'Are you sick?' I asked as I bent over him, 'Want me to call Jael or Vans?'
"He
waved his hand 'no' as he sat up, his tongue quickly lapping at his lips. I
asked if he was sure and he snapped at me to mind my own business. Much ruder
than that, of course.
"I
stomped my foot in frustration as I angrily dropped the books onto a nearby
chair, 'So much for caring. Screw you! As if it matters to me if you
die.'
"He
glared at me, 'Die!? Hn, I would do nothing of the sort!'
"He
got to his feet, a little of his strength seeming to have returned to him. He
made his way over to the kitchen area. He pulled from a large barrel in the
corner, a large chunk of heavily meat, snapping in my direction as he reached
for a large cutting knife, 'Hungry?'
"I
was, and though I was not too keen on sharing a meal with someone so unkind, I
consented, for I tended to take food over matter. I sat at the wooden square
table just behind the tall wine rack and waited for him. He returned with two
plates piled with strips of the meat. He placed one before me before sitting
down at the opposite end of the table with his.
"
'So,' I began as I slowly nibbled at my food. I had nothing to say really, and
it didn't look like Hermes would either by the way he was tearing through his
own meat like a cannibal. Obviously his coughing spell had not affected his
appetite in the least.
"He
looked at me with huge wide eyes, a strip of meat hanging from his mouth, and
as he spoke his words were slurred since his mouth was full, 'Waff? Spith ith
outh kid.'
"
'Nothing,' I shook my head, 'I was just thinking about… forget it….'
"He
narrowed his eyes, the light glinting in his black pupils strangely as he
swallowed, 'You are hiding something. I don't know what it is, but there is
something about you that just seems like….'
"I
was shaking my head, nervously prodding at my nearly untouched food. I feared
he had guessed I was… I was a girl.
"
'Than what is it?' he snapped as he tore back into his food, 'Why are you so
glum?'
"I
decided I'd tell him as much of what was on my mind as I could, 'I had a… a
friend. He was a dear friend of the princess. And now… he's just… disappeared.
I have no idea what happened to him. is he dead? Alive? Hiding? I have no way
of getting in touch with him and I… I just don't know what to do.'
"He
placed an elbow on the table, cradling his chin in his hand, 'So? You expect me
to care? Just forget everything that happened to you before you came here. Look
into the future and stop dragging your feet in the past!'
"I
abruptly stood, the chair screeching on the floor as I pushed it away, 'You
think I'll forget the only true friends I ever had so damn easy? Well you've
got another thing coming, Hermes. Don't you forget it!' "
"Zelda!"
Impa furrowed her brow, "He was your elder! How could you snap at him like
that?"
Zelda
frowned as she crossed her arms and looked away. "Well it was like that between
us for months and months. We'd argue, shout, and throw stuff at each other
even. Yet all the time he never learned I was a girl."
"So
what then?" Impa asked.
"I
hurtled down the spiral steps into the catacombs. Near the bottom, Odysseus was
balancing a large china urn in his arms. I throttled by him, making him wobble
on his feet as he struggled to keep the huge vase in control. Gently setting it
down at the foot of the spiral steps, he chased after me as I ran down the
corridor to my room.
"
'Sheik, Sheik!' he was saying as he entered my chamber, 'What's up?'
"I
was sitting on the bed with the music box in my lap as I gently spun the little
crank. The box spouted out its little tune. There were still splinters in my
fingers, and the blood stained the mahogany wood as I stroked the lid.
"
'How did it go?' he plopped on the bed beside me, 'You have a good time with
Lord Hermes?'
"
'Damn that bastard!' I said angrily, 'I can't stand him! What a pompous ass he
is!'
"Odysseus
crossed his arms and rolled his eyes, 'I think you and Hermes need to come to
some kind of agreement. Stop this senseless bickering. It might loosen the
seams of the Coven if one person sidetracks the leader. We have to work as
one!'
"I
didn't meet his eyes, nor did I even look up for that matter. He touched the
back of one of my hands, turning it over to see the bloody splintered flesh, 'This
is?'
"
'Accident,' I responded simply.
"He
looked at me long and hard and then stood. Rooting around in one of the drawers
of a bureau nearby, he produced a small medical kit. Popping the silver lid
open, he took out a dainty little golden tweezers. Then he gently began to ease
the splinters from my flesh as I watched on in silence, flinching every now and
then.
"I
wanted to tell him about myself; the real me. I wanted to tell him that I was
really lonely. Sure, everyone was kind enough to me… but I felt I didn't quite
fit it. Was I all alone in the universe? I felt that way. Link was gone. You
were gone… as was my family and everyone I had grown up with. In fact, I was
about to open my mouth and blurt everything out when he spoke.
"
'Vans gave you Praedari's bird I see,' he said, tearing me from my thoughts
with this trivial matter. I guess he was just trying to make conversation.
"I
shrugged, 'I suppose it's a nice thing to have around.'
"Odysseus
nodded as he drew out another long bloody spike of wood from my palm with the
tweezers, 'That much? You miss your old life that much?'
"
'Not so much the life, but the people in it,' I sighed.
"
'Like who?' he asked. I had no idea if me meant to pry. Was I to tell him? "
"
'My best friends,' I began to say, 'The princess'—for in a sense, the Princess
Zelda was only a friend of mine who has as well, faded with my past—'and then…
there was this… boy… this boy called Link.'
"Odysseus
'mmhmm'ed as he stoked my other palm to bring the splinters to the surface.
"I
went on, closing my eyes as visions of his smiling face swept through my brain.
I could see him almost in perfect detail: his bright cerulean eyes and his
messy golden locks right down to his booted feet, 'He's gone though. I miss
him.'
"Odysseus
grinned and made a small grunt, 'Get over it.'
"I
pulled my hands away from him, 'How could you be so cold! Do you not feel any
sympathy at all?'
"
'Such is the heart of a thief,' he said quietly as he reached for my hand
again. I jerked further away.
"
'Go away!' I was seething with hate, 'Why, why? No one here understands! I
should just give up waiting if I must forget him! I'll curl up and die!'
"He
laughed and said in a sing-song sort of tone, 'Too young to die, too young to
die! Death is no answer! You in a rush to get to Hell or something?'
" 'Maybe I am!' I thought of that damned
Gerudo, Ganondorf, 'But whether I go now or later, Hell gallops towards us as
we speak. It hails from the desert and Death is at the reins.'
"
'What the hell kind of poetic prophesy is that?' he laughed hard; so hard tears
came to his eyes.
"
'Truth,' I snapped, 'It will come to pass. There will be Hell to pay!'
"
'Hell, hell, hell,' Odysseus slipped back into his sing-songy voice, 'For a
little thing you sure seem to know a lot about death.'
"
'I learned just a bit too young in my life if you ask me,' I snapped back.
"Suddenly,
there was a great gust of wind that whistled through the corridor outside, and
burst into the room, blowing the door wide open. Tapestries twisted about and
all the lamps in the room blew out, leaving Odysseus and I in sheer darkness.
"
'The hell was all that about?' he said in an irritated voice as he struck a
match. His face was illuminated strangely in the light, only half of his face
bathed in golden light. The light streaked his auburn hair and danced merrily
in his dark blue eyes. But as the light waned, the flamed eating up the match,
scalding his fingertips, he dropped the extinguished match, howling in pain,
'Ow, ow! Dammit, ow!'
"We
were in darkness again. I groped around until I had latched my fingers around
his belt, slowly tracing it until I found the pouch where he kept his matches.
I slid the small matchbook out and struck another match, this time bringing the
flame carefully to a nearby lamp. I whispered quietly as the fire licked at the
lamp's wick, 'He's here.'
"
'What in the hell are you talking about?' he said as he snatched his matchbook
back out of my hands.
"
'Ganondorf, Ganondorf,' I quivered with fear at the thought. So he had come.
And I was deathly afraid. He had armies. He had evil power. Oh! That power!
What was it? Oh, what was it? Too powerful, far too powerful to be Ganondorf.
But no! It was Ganondorf. I felt that presence. It was most certainly he. Oh
yes, it was. But still… that power… what was it?
"
'Sheik?' he waved his hand in front of my blank stare, 'Sheik, you're really
scaring me. Sheik? Speak to me dammit! Sheik!'
"I
barely heard him. My mind was elsewhere, slipping back into that dream state.
Flying, like the wind into that dream. I heard a thousand chorusing voices
ringing through my head. I found myself wandering through a golden reality.
That power? What is it, what is it?
"I
could feel that evil power bombarding me like a hail storm. Pounding,
pounding, constantly. Was that my heart? Thumping, thumping. And
there were those voices, now nothing more than a dizzying humdrum. It wailed in
my ears. The power seared in my head. And it frightened me.
"And
yet… and yet there was this small flicker of warm power that eased me of the
painful Darkness. I knew this had to be Link's power. It was a small power, a
new power, yet it was growing. Welling in that Sacred Realm where he slept was
his power. His strengths and prowess was becoming more acute. He was like a
lone flame, flickering in the Dark, sure to erupt into an angry blaze soon.
"
'Zelda,' I heard the voice of Ganondorf drone, 'Zelda, where are you? I'm
looking for you, Zelda.'
"
'Shut up, shut up,' I covered my ears. As my dream self did so, my physical
body did as well. Odysseus was pulling at me. I could feel him tearing me away
from the dream, away from that tiny flame of Link's power. I wanted to run away
from reality. I wanted to run towards Link. Closer! Just a little more. Hark!
There was his warmth.
"
'DAMMIT SHEIK!' I felt a harsh slap across my face. But that voice wasn't that
of Odysseus. Hermes. Damn.
"He
was holding me by the collar, now shaking me fiercely, 'Little screw up, little
SCREW UP! Wake up!'
"My
eyes focused and my head swam. I had a horrid headache and my limbs were pins
and needles. Slowly, I saw the hulking form of Hermes bent over me. I could
just make out Odysseus' small outline behind him in the dim light, a sheepish
smile. 'I had to get him. I didn't know what to do!' he was mumbling as I
scowled at the two of them.
"Hermes
was barefoot, his tunic falling loosely off his body. He was bent over me in
such a way that I could see right down his tunic, realizing that he wore
nothing beneath it. And my cheeks were suddenly hot and red as I inched back a
few feet.
"He
licked his lower lip, arching one pale blue brow, 'Yes, welcome back to reality
little screw up. Jeez, what is your problem?'
"I
said nothing and crossed my arms and turned away, 'Felt a presence and tried to
warn your little thief boy over there.'
"
'Who, Odysseus?' Hermes snapped, 'With any luck you'll grow to be half the man
Odysseus is.'
"
'He looks like a boy to me,' I grumbled.
"
'A minor detail!' he snapped again sarcastically, 'You know damn well what I mean.'
"
'And I take it you what I mean when I say that Hell has arrived,
here, in this very city!' I retorted as I slinked off the bed and across the
room, far away from the both of them.
"
'I see no danger,' Hermes brushed it off with disdain as he straightened and
turned to face me.
"I
snarled, 'Don't take that creeping Evil so lightly.'
"I
saw Odysseus in the background of our argument, looking hurt and a little
crestfallen. He saw me looking at him and promptly hissed, 'Why're you pissed
at me? I didn't do a thing to you!'
"
'You brought that… that bastard in here!' I pointed a quivering finger
in Hermes' direction.
"
'If that's the case, then perhaps I should be angry at Lysander, Vans and Jael
for bringing you into my ring of thieves,' Hermes replied in a calm
voice, smooth as silk and casual as you please, 'You shouldn't be so hasty as
to point the finger of blame.'
"
'Yeah, and if it weren't for us, you'd prob'ly be dead by now,' Odysseus added
in a cold tone, 'You and that bitch of a mother who brought you screaming into
this damned world would be beaten and dead at the harbor by now if it wasn't
for my Lord Hermes.'
"He
really did not need to have said that.
"
'And that anarchy you and your gang seem to enjoy so much,' I was jumping on
the defensive, 'if you value it so, then go join ranks with that damn Gerudo
who gave it to you!'
"
'We don't do work with Gerudo thieves,' Hermes said bluntly. Then he smiled and
put a hand on his hip, the other twisting the tail of his braid at his side, 'Well
I guess if you can't stand Gerudo thieves it's a start. Better than working
from scratch.'
"Odysseus
was smiling too as he nodded in agreement with Hermes.
'Just
look at your arm, at that tattoo and remember what it means,' Hermes said as he
and Odysseus began to head for the door, 'You are one of us. Don't you dare
forget it.' "
Trembling with rage, I spat
after him as he disappeared round the bend. Why was my life so hard? I threw
myself back on the bed, staring at the ceiling and wishing that Link was there,
for surely he would know what to do….
~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~
Every night in my
dreams,
I see you,
I feel you,
That is how I know you
go on.
Far across the distance,
And spaces between us,
You have come to show
you go on.
Near, far, wherever you
are,
I believe that the heart
does go on.
Once more, you opened
the door,
And you're here in my
heart and,
My heart will go on and
on
Love can touch just one
time,
And last for a lifetime,
And never let go until
We're one
Love was when I loved
you,
One true time,
I hold you,
In my life we'll always
go on.
Near, far, wherever you
are,
I believe that the heart
does go on.
Once more, you opened
the door,
And you're here in my
heart and,
My heart will go on and
on.
You're here,
There's nothing I fear,
And I know that my heart
will go on.
We'll stay forever this
way,
You are safe in my heart
and,
My heart will go on and
on.
~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~
Hey
there! Link Worshiper here! Like it? Well if you're bored with it, know it's
just gettin' kickin'! More action on the way! Kindly enough, I decided to put
this monster story into chapters, just for you picky people who hate big drawn
out things or just need a space to stop and rest at. Have fun and read on!
Comments/gripes/thoughts/Link/chili dogs/love accepted gratefully. Oh, and if
you didn't like it, I'd like to hear more than just "I hated it." For god's
sake, at least be creative with your insults! Did it ever occur to you
that I actually use reviews to write the next story?
~Peace out~
The
Link Worshiper